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אֵיכָה Lamentations Chapter 3:45-66

25/5/2025

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He doesn’t say “Fear not.” The Hebrew reads “No fear!”

“Fear not” denotes a need for the comforted to overcome their own fear, whereas “No fear” is entirely the work of God, Who has commanded it so!
​Observing the Poetic Repetition for the Emphasis of Established Elements in the Text:
 
3:45 You have placed us as scraps[a] and refuse[a] in the midst of the peoples (tribes).[b]
3:46 All our enemies[b] have opened their mouths against us.
3:47 Terror[c] and a pit trap[d] have come upon us, ruin[e] and shattering;[e]
3:48 Irrigation channels of water run down from my eyes[f], because of the breaking[g] of the daughter of my people[h].
3:49 My eyes split, flowing unceasingly[f], without intermission[f],
3:50 Until the YHVH Lord (Mercy)[j] looks down[q] and inspects[q] from the heavens[w].
3:51 My eyes affect my soul[f] severely because of all the daughters of my city.[h]
3:52 My enemies[b] without reason hunted me[d] down like a bird;
3:53 They have silenced me[i] in the pit[d]  and have thrown stones on me.[d]
3:54 Waters flowed over my head[i]; I said, “I am divided[g]!”
3:55 I called Your Name, YHVH Lord (Mercy) [j] , from the lowest cistern[d]  (pit within a dungeon). [ref. Jer. 38:6]
3:56 My voice You have heard[k], “Don’t hide Your ear[k] from my sighing[m] (breathing, spirit panting), from my cry for help[l].”
3:57 You drew near[n] on the day I called to You[l]; You said, “No fear!”[c]
3:58 You have contended[n]  Adonay (Master) with my soul’s strife[c]; You have redeemed my life[m].
3:59 You have seen[q] YHVH Lord (Mercy) [j]  the bending of me; Judge my case.
3:60 You have seen[q]  all their vengeance[d], all their premeditated plans[d] against me.
3:61 You have heard[k] their scorn[t], YHVH Lord (Mercy) [j] , all their schemes[d] upon me.
3:62 The language[r] of my assailants and their murmuring[r] against me continues all day long[s].
3:63 In their sitting[s] and their getting up[s], look[q]! I’m their song of mocking[t].
3:64 Turn back[u] on them what they deserve[v] YHVH Lord (Mercy) [j]  according to the work of their hands.
3:65 Give[u]  to them sorrowful blindness of heart[v], Your curse[v] will be on them.
3:66 Pursue them[u] in nostril flaring anger and annihilate[v] them from under the heavens[w] of YHVH Lord (Mercy) [j] !
 
סְחִ֧י וּמָא֛וֹס תְּשִׂימֵ֖נוּ בְּקֶ֥רֶב הָעַמִּֽים׃
 
3:45 You have placed us as scraps and refuse in the midst of the peoples (tribes).
 
This speaks to God casting off Judah like food scraps and garbage. The term “peoples” could be seen as synonymous with “heathens”, “Non-believers”, “Pagans.”
 
On the other hand, it is the Hebrew גוים goyim that is most often employed to represent the unbelieving nations whereas the Hebrew עמים amiym is most often used to refer collectively to the tribes of Israel. If this is the correct understanding, this verse makes Judah the refuse (lowest) among the tribes of Israel (those already in captivity as a result of the Assyrian invasion years earlier). This is significant because Judah is the tribe from whom the lineage of King David and the greater Son of David the King Messiah is reckoned.
 
The weight of the metaphor is extreme. Judah (Israel) has sunk so low as to be garbage among idolaters (nations or tribes). Judah’s willing participation in idolatry sees her made refuse to the false gods among the tribes of Israel and the nations.
 
Rashi cites the Mishnah concerning the translation of the Hebrew “סְחִ֧י וּמָא֛וֹס” sechiy umaos, as “phlegm and mucus”:
 
“Spittle, abominable. This is mucus; in the language of the Mishnah, ‘his phlegm and his mucus,’ [Maseches Bava Kama 3b]. which is drawn out through the lungs and emitted through the throat.”
 
- Rashi on Lamentations 3:45
 
 פָּצ֥וּ עָלֵ֛ינוּ פִּיהֶ֖ם כָּל־אֹיְבֵֽינוּ׃
 
3:46 All our enemies have opened their mouths against us.
 
This is the observation of the people of Judah that reflects the observation of the prophet by the Holy Spirit in Lamentations 2:26.
 
 פַּ֧חַד וָפַ֛חַת הָ֥יָה לָ֖נוּ הַשֵּׁ֥את וְהַשָּֽׁבֶר׃
 
3:47 Terror and a pit trap have come upon us, ruin and shattering;
 
The terror of the enemies of Judah pales in comparison to the terror they experience in the hands of the Living God.
 
The pit trap prepared for Judah corresponds to the dungeon-cistern prepared for Jeremiah.
 
“Ruin and shattering” are the couplet to “scrapes and refuse”.
 
 פַּלְגֵי־מַ֙יִם֙ תֵּרַ֣ד עֵינִ֔י עַל־שֶׁ֖בֶר בַּת־עַמִּֽי׃
 
3:48 Irrigation channels of water run down from my eyes, because of the breaking of the daughter of my people.
 
The irrigation metaphor is almost sardonic. Fresh water irrigation in a dry land is celebrated whereas salt water irrigation in a dry land is a curse.
 
The allusion to “the daughter of my people” emphasises the fact that the most vulnerable of Judah have been harmed. Her potential progeny defiled. Thus the flood of tears.
 
“Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!”
 
-Y’rmiyahu (Jeremiah) 9:1
 
“Like streams of water my eyes flowed with tears because of the destruction of the congregation of my people.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:48
 
 עֵינִ֧י נִגְּרָ֛ה וְלֹ֥א תִדְמֶ֖ה מֵאֵ֥ין הֲפֻגֽוֹת׃
 
3:49 My eyes split, flowing unceasingly, without intermission,
 
This is the couplet that corresponds to the previous verse. Here the flood of tears is emphatic. It is both unceasing and without intermission.
 
Unceasing because Judah has lost all including those most dear to her, and without intermission because God has not yet intervened to bring relief.
 
“My eye weeps tears and does not cease from crying. There is no respite from my anguish or anyone to comfort me;”
 
- Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:49
 
 עַד־יַשְׁקִ֣יף וְיֵ֔רֶא יְהוָ֖ה מִשָּׁמָֽיִם׃
 
3:50 Until the YHVH Lord (Mercy) looks down and inspects from the heavens.
 
This verse brings to mind the God of Mercy Himself. Here the intimate Proper Noun YHVH is employed to convey mercy.
 
He looks down in juxtaposition to His previous refusal to hear the prayers of the unrepentant wicked.
 
He looks down from the heavens as an allusion to His sovereignty over everything. The heavens, like all created things, are in Him. This poetic language simply seeks to convey within time and space things that are beyond the comprehension of the time bound.
 
“Until” is synonymous with “wait” and indicates the hope of the repentant.
 
“Until the Lord looks out and sees my humiliation from heaven.”
 
- Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:50
 
 עֵינִי֙ עֽוֹלְלָ֣ה לְנַפְשִׁ֔י מִכֹּ֖ל בְּנ֥וֹת עִירִֽי׃
 
3:51 My eyes affect my soul severely because of all the daughters of my city.
 
This makes a third reference to the eyes, this time showing the connection between what the eyes see and the entire soul-life of a person. To see the most precious and vulnerable of one’s family suffer unto death brings the utter collapse of the soul. The soul deflates under the weight of such a sight and every function of the body, mind and spirit is made subject to numb existence rather than vital life.
 
The city is of course Jerusalem.
 
“The weeping of my eyes is the cause of the affliction of my soul over the destruction of the districts of my people and the humiliation of the daughters of Jerusalem, my city.”
 
- Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:51
 
 צ֥וֹד צָד֛וּנִי כַּצִּפּ֖וֹר אֹיְבַ֥י חִנָּֽם׃
 
3:52 My enemies without reason hunted me down like a bird;
 
The enemies of Judah had no reason for their attack other than a desire to establish Empire (a counterfeit to the kingdom of God). However, the reason for her being hunted down is her own sin. The enemies of Judah hunted her without reason, but God had established reason in her discipline at the hands of the unreasonable.
 
The bird analogy again emphasises the heights from which Judah had fallen and her vulnerable position as the subject of a hunting party.
 
 צָֽמְת֤וּ בַבּוֹר֙ חַיָּ֔י וַיַּדּוּ־אֶ֖בֶן בִּֽי׃
 
3:53 They have silenced me in the pit and have thrown stones on me.
 
This again reflects Jeremiah’s position in the dungeon and is coupled with verse 55.
 
The added “and have thrown stones on me” confirms the firmly established nature of the discipline meted out by the Babylonians under God’s command.
 
Rashi understands the “stones” to refer to the stones placed over the mouths of cisterns used as dungeons/holding cells:
 
“And cast stones upon me. On the mouth of the well [dungeon]. That is what they did to Doniyeil (Daniel); and Yirmiyahu (Jeremiah) foresaw it with the Holy Spirit.”
 
- Rashi on Lamentations 3:53
 
 צָֽפוּ־מַ֥יִם עַל־רֹאשִׁ֖י אָמַ֥רְתִּי נִגְזָֽרְתִּי׃
 
3:54 Waters flowed over my head; I said, “I am divided!”
 
Waters over the head is a metaphor for death and shows the complete subjugation of the people. Death divides the body and spirit making a distinction between the temporary and the everlasting.
 
The head represents the king and when the king falls the kingdom is divided. Thus, “I am divided.” This is also prophetic of the division between Israel and Judah and the divided exiles of each group respectively.
 
“Waters flowed over my head. I said in my word, ‘I am cut off from the world.’”
 
- Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:54
 
“The waters rose, etc. When a person is in water up to his waist, there still is hope, but if the water rises over his head, he then says, ‘My hope is gone,’ but I do not do this, rather ‘I called out, etc.’”
 
-Rashi on Lamentations 3:54
 
 קָרָ֤אתִי שִׁמְךָ֙ יְהוָ֔ה מִבּ֖וֹר תַּחְתִּיּֽוֹת׃
 
3:55 I called Your Name, YHVH Lord (Mercy), from the lowest cistern (pit within a dungeon). [ref. Jer. 38:6]
 
The prophet/Judah/Israel/the Messiah, all call on YHVH.
 
Jeremiah calls from the cistern within the dungeon. Judah/Israel calls from the mire of her captivity. Messiah suffers her affliction and calls out to the Father “Abba”. Mercy Himself is looking down from the heavens and is present in Judah’s affliction.
 
This is finally a cry of genuine repentance from Judah. Therefore, where her prayers were once refused because they were not prayed from a truly repentant heart, they’re now received due to the humble nature they have adopted.
 
 קוֹלִ֖י שָׁמָ֑עְתָּ אַל־תַּעְלֵ֧ם אָזְנְךָ֛ לְרַוְחָתִ֖י לְשַׁוְעָתִֽי׃
 
3:56 My voice You have heard, “Don’t hide Your ear from my sighing (breathing, spirit panting), from my cry for help.”
 
Formerly God had refused (closed His ear intentionally) the unrepentant prayers of Judah, now He hears (in response to the humble petition) her genuine repentance. In fact, He has longed to hear her pray this way and is ready and willing to act in forgiveness.
 
The Hebrew reads more literally as “Don’t hide your ear from my spirit.”
 
“You received my prayer at that time, and now do not cover your ears from receiving my prayer to give me relief because of my plea.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:56
 
 קָרַ֙בְתָּ֙ בְּי֣וֹם אֶקְרָאֶ֔ךָּ אָמַ֖רְתָּ אַל־תִּירָֽא׃
 
3:57 You drew near on the day I called to You; You said, “No fear!”
 
Immediately in response to the genuine cry of repentance God draws near in intimate comfort and reconciliation.
 
He doesn’t say “Fear not.” The Hebrew reads “No fear!”
 
“Fear not” denotes a need for the comforted to overcome their own fear, whereas “No fear” is entirely the work of God, Who has commanded it so!
 
The Targum notes that it’s God’s living word, essence “Memra” (Davar, Logos ref. John 1) that speaks life into this reconciliation:
 
“You brought the malakh (messenger/angel) near to save me, in the day that I prayed to you. You said by your Memra, “No fear.””
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:57
 
“No fear! for I am with you: be not dismayed; for I am your Elohim: I will strengthen you; yes, I will help you; yes, I will uphold you with the right hand of My righteousness.”
 
-Y’shayahu (Isaiah) 41:10
 
 רַ֧בְתָּ אֲדֹנָ֛י רִיבֵ֥י נַפְשִׁ֖י גָּאַ֥לְתָּ חַיָּֽי׃
 
3:58 You have contended Adonay (Master) with my soul’s strife; You have redeemed my life.
 
The plain meaning is that God has fought against Judah’s enemies to prevent Judah/Israel’s annihilation and has kept her alive in order to return her to the land of Israel. However this can be understood in a number of ways:
 
·      God, Judah’s Master has Personally contended for her soul. He has paid the price for her, receiving her just punishment upon Himself.
·      God has contended with the wickedness within Judah’s soul and has overcome it for her sake.
·      God has brought clarity to Judah’s soul, showing her right from wrong and contending with her divided nature in order to impart His unified nature to her.
 
In all this He has redeemed her. She has not saved herself.
 
“You fought, O God, the battles of my soul. In the days past.”
 
-Rashi on Lamentations 3:58
 
“You have fought, O Lord, against those who made a quarrel with my soul. You delivered my life from their hands.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:58
 
 רָאִ֤יתָה יְהוָה֙ עַוָּ֣תָתִ֔י שָׁפְטָ֖ה מִשְׁפָּטִֽי׃
 
3:59 You have seen YHVH Lord (Mercy) the bending of me; Judge my case.
 
Once again the Holy Name denoting Mercy is used to emphasise that aspect of God’s character.
 
“The bending of me” can be read “My perversion” and thus the text can be understood in multiple ways.
 
·      “You have seen me bent by my enemies, afflicted”
 
“You have seen, O Lord, the wrong by which they wronged me. Judge my case.
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:59
 
·      “You have seen my perverse actions”
 
In either case “You can be trusted to judge my case fairly”. Where true repentance is involved the judgement will result in redemption.
 
 רָאִ֙יתָה֙ כָּל־נִקְמָתָ֔ם כָּל־מַחְשְׁבֹתָ֖ם לִֽי׃
 
3:60 You have seen all their vengeance, all their premeditated plans against me.
 
“All their vengeance has been revealed before you, all their evil plans against me.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:59
 
 שָׁמַ֤עְתָּ חֶרְפָּתָם֙ יְהוָ֔ה כָּל־מַחְשְׁבֹתָ֖ם עָלָֽי׃
 
3:61 You have heard their scorn, YHVH Lord (Mercy), all their schemes upon me.
 
God in mercy hears the scorn of Israel’s enemies. He keeps an account of the harm done against her.
 
 שִׂפְתֵ֤י קָמַי֙ וְהֶגְיוֹנָ֔ם עָלַ֖י כָּל־הַיּֽוֹם׃
 
3:62 The language of my assailants and their murmuring against me continues all day long.
 
The couplet of language and murmuring emphasises the malice and established wickedness of Israel’s enemies.
 
“Murmuring” can also be read as “meditation.” In other words, the enemies of Israel have premeditated the evil acts committed against her and are therefore subject to condemnation.
 
 שִׁבְתָּ֤ם וְקִֽימָתָם֙ הַבִּ֔יטָה אֲנִ֖י מַנְגִּינָתָֽם׃
 
3:63 In their sitting and their getting up, look! I’m their song of mocking.
 
Just as the righteous meditate on God’s word day and night, sitting at the table and getting up to go on their way (Deut. 6), so too in opposition to this the wicked mock (Psalm 1) both sitting at their tables and rising to go on their way.
 
“You know my sitting and my rising, You understand my thought afar off.”
 
-Tehillim (Psalms) 139:2
 
 תָּשִׁ֨יב לָהֶ֥ם גְּמ֛וּל יְהוָ֖ה כְּמַעֲשֵׂ֥ה יְדֵיהֶֽם׃
 
3:64 Turn back on them what they deserve YHVH Lord (Mercy) according to the work of their hands.
 
Verses 64 through 66 are rendered by the Septuagint and the Vulgate as prophecies rather than petitions. However, these verses are both petition and prophecy.
 
This petition asks in repentance, for justice to be enacted against the wickedness of Israel’s enemies. Babylon was not employed as a rod of discipline because she was righteous. God will not leave wickedness unpunished.
 
Against Babylon Jeremiah prophecies:
 
“Shout against her round about: she has given her hand: her foundations are fallen, her walls are thrown down: for it is the vengeance of YHVH: take vengeance upon her; as she has done, do unto her.”
 
-Yirmiyahu (Jeremiah) 50:15
 
 תִּתֵּ֤ן לָהֶם֙ מְגִנַּת־לֵ֔ב תַּאֲלָֽתְךָ֖ לָהֶֽם׃
 
3:65 Give to them sorrowful blindness of heart, Your curse will be on them.
 
This is a request for the fruit of the idolatrous to be allowed to come to its fullness. Those who wilfully blind themselves to God will receive the blindness that dooms the heart to destruction. Thus the observation of the prophet, “Your curse will be on them”!
 
 תִּרְדֹּ֤ף בְּאַף֙ וְתַשְׁמִידֵ֔ם מִתַּ֖חַת שְׁמֵ֥י יְהוָֽה׃
 
3:66 Pursue them in nostril flaring anger and annihilate them from under the heavens of YHVH Lord (Mercy)!
 
Just as God looked down from the heavens in mercy toward Judah/Israel (v. 50), so too He looks upon the wicked acts of Israel’s enemies and upon their false gods and causes both them and their false gods to perish from the face of the earth. That is, “from under the heavens.”
 
The phrase, “from under the heavens” is used rather than “from the face of the earth” because the Hebrew הארץ ha’aretz can mean “the land” and most often refers to the land of Israel. God will not only wipe the wicked nations from the face of the land of Israel, but also from the face of all the earth, “from under the heavens.”
 
“Thus shall you say unto them, the gods that have not made the heavens and the earth, they shall perish from the earth, and from under these heavens.”
 
-Yirmiyahu (Jeremiah) 10:11
 
Copyright 2025 Yaakov (Brown) Ben Yehoshua
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אֵיכָה Lamentations Chapter 3:24-44

3/5/2025

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The grief that results from sin is not the result of a vindictive God but rather the fruit of humanity’s wilful rebellion.
Observing the Poetic Repetition for the Emphasis of Established Elements in the Text:
 
3:24 “The LORD YHVH (MERCY)[a] is my portion” says my soul[e]; following this realisation I wait expectantly[f] for him.
3:25 The LORD YHVH (MERCY) a is good[g] to those whose hope[f] is in Him, to the soule who seeks Him;
3:26 It is good[g] to tremble[h] and wait[f] silently[i] for the salvation of The LORD YHVH (MERCY) [a].
3:27 It is good[g] for a man to bear the yoke[j] in his youth.
3:28 Let him sit silent[h/i] in isolation, for the LORD has lifted it onto him.
3:29 Let him put his mouth in the dust[h]—perhaps he will have hope[f].
3:30 Let him give his jaw to one who would strike him[j], and let him be satisfied with rebuke[h/j].
3:31 For Adonay (the Master)[b] does not cast off forever[k].
3:32 For there is grief[l], there is also compassion[k], so great is his unfailing kindness[k] (practiced love).
3:33 For he does not afflict[j] according to his heart[n] (core being) or grievel the children of a man.
3:34 To crush underfoot all the captives[m] of a land,
3:35 To pervert judgement[m] of a man before the face of Elyon the Most High[c],
3:36 To misrepresent[m] a human being in a dispute—does Adonay (the Master)[b] not see such a thing?
3:37 Who can speak something and have it come to pass if Adonay (the Master)[b] has not commanded it?
3:38 Is it not from the mouth of Elyon the Most High[c] that both the bad circumstances[j] (haraot pl.) and the good[g] (v’hatov sg.) come?
3:38 Alt. From the mouth of Elyon the Most High does not come both evils (haraot pl.) and the good (v’hatov sg.). [In the sense that God does not mix evil and good together or compromise the good, rather He makes a clear distinction between the two].
3:39 Why should a living person complain, a man upon whom sin resides[m]?
3:40 Let us search our ways[h] and test them[h], and let us turn perpetually to The LORD YHVH
(MERCY) [a].
3:41 Let us lift up our hearts[n] (inner person) and our hands to El God[d] in the heavens, saying:
3:42 “We have rebelled[m] and have been contentious[m] and you have not forgiven[p].
3:43 You have fenced[o] Yourself/us with anger and pursued us[j], slaying us without pity[j].
3:44 You have hedged[o] Yourself/us with a cloud[o] so that no prayer can pass through[p].  
 
חֶלְקִ֤י יְהוָה֙ אָמְרָ֣ה נַפְשִׁ֔י עַל־כֵּ֖ן אוֹחִ֥יל לֽוֹ׃
 
3:24 “The LORD YHVH (MERCY) is my portion” says my soul; following this realisation I wait expectantly for him.
 
The Holy Name denotes Mercy. The prophet/Judah/Israel/Messiah, acknowledge the everlasting fact that God is enough. When YHVH is my portion, allotment etc. I am secure, even in the midst of affliction. Therefore, when this realisation sets in I look to Him, waiting expectantly for Him to manifest His merciful grace. “Though He tarry, yet will I wait daily for His coming!” [the 12th of Maimonides’ 13 principles of faith]
 
This continues the repentant prayer of the preceding verses. To acknowledge that God is my portion is to accept my guilt and act in repentance. I therefore have my hope renewed in Him.
 
“The LORD is the portion of my inheritance and of my cup: You maintain my lot.”
 
-Tehillim (Psalms) 16:5 
 
This Psalm of David compares the LORD his portion with the sorrowful portion of false gods. David, speaking by the Holy Spirit, explains that when a person accepts YHVH as his portion, that person is the recipient and heir to a godly heritage, pleasant paths, counsel day and night and ultimately, resurrection unto life everlasting.
 
“My flesh and my heart (core being) fail: but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever.”
 
-Tehillim (Psalms) 73:26 
 
This Psalm of Asaph expresses repentance concerning the foolishness of being jealous of the prosperity of the wicked who, despite their temporary successes nonetheless end in destruction. The psalmist observes that in all circumstances God is with him and that even though his body and inner person may fail, God remains and strengthens his inner person; God Himself being his portion forever.
 
God being the portion of those made righteous through blood atonement received in repentance is also reminiscent of the Levitical priests who were not assigned a tribal region of land but instead received God as their inheritance (Num. 18:20; Deut. 18:1-2).
 
 ט֤וֹב יְהוָה֙ לְקוָֹ֔ו לְנֶ֖פֶשׁ תִּדְרְשֶֽׁנּוּ׃
 
3:25 The LORD YHVH (MERCY) is good to those whose hope is in Him, to the soul who seeks Him;
 
This reflects the themes of Psalms 16 and 73. According to His nature God is Good (Mark 10:18). His goodness is made manifest to those who place their hope in Him. Only the humble can receive God’s goodness, which is the true strength of the inner person (heart).
 
“But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.”
 
-Hebrews 11:6
 
ט֤וֹב וְיָחִיל֙ וְדוּמָ֔ם לִתְשׁוּעַ֖ת יְהוָֽה׃
 
3:26 It is good to tremble and wait silently for the salvation of the LORD YHVH (MERCY).
 
God is holy and defines goodness. Therefore, to tremble before Him in silent humility, waiting on His redemptive work, is part of the greater meaning of goodness. Those who fear God will see an end to fear. Both the goal of the fear of the LORD and the destruction of all ungodly fear which is bound up in condemnation.
 
“But if we hope for that which we don’t see, we wait with patience for it.”
 
-Romans 8:25
 
While in the context of Lamentations 3 the salvation waited on in the immediate historical sense is ultimately deliverance from Babylonian captivity, it’s nonetheless also written in anticipation of the entry of Messiah into the chronology of time and space through the womb of Miriam (Mary).
 
ט֣וֹב לַגֶּ֔בֶר כִּֽי־יִשָּׂ֥א עֹ֖ל בִּנְעוּרָֽיו׃
 
3:27 It is good for a man to bear the yoke in his youth.
 
“It is good for a man to train his soul to bear the yoke of the commandments in his youth.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:27
 
The yoke is both the yoke of correction/firm physical discipline and the yoke of Biblical Instruction, Torah.
 
“Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and you all shall find rest for your souls.”
 
-Mattisiyahu (Matthew) 11:29
 
To bear the discipline of God in youth is to receive godly, established outcomes. To receive the Instruction (Torah) of God as a measure of holiness when we’re young means being kept from falling off a cliff’s edge by a well-placed fence.
  
 יֵשֵׁ֤ב בָּדָד֙ וְיִדֹּ֔ם כִּ֥י נָטַ֖ל עָלָֽיו׃
 
3:28 Let him sit silent in isolation, for the LORD has lifted it onto him.
 
The yoke of the previous verse has been placed by God upon the one He loves (Heb. 12:6). Receiving this yoke in sober, silent, self-reflection is a precursor to active repentance and true contrition. 
 
“Let him sit alone and be silent, bearing the corrections which have come upon him, for the sake of the unity of the Name of the Lord, which have been sent to punish him for the minor sins which he has committed in this world, until He have mercy upon him and lift them from him so that He may receive him perfected in the world to come.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:28
 
“But each of you, when you pray, enter into your inner secret room, and when each of you has shut your door, pray to your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward each of you openly.”
 
-Mattisiyahu (Matthew) 6:6
 
יִתֵּ֤ן בֶּֽעָפָר֙ פִּ֔יהוּ אוּלַ֖י יֵ֥שׁ תִּקְוָֽה׃
 
3:29 Let him put his mouth in the dust—perhaps he will have hope.
 
This is an admonishment to act in humility and true repentance. Putting the mouth to the dust is symbolic of silencing one’s own rebellious speech, putting sinful speech to death (dust to dust).
 
The words “perhaps he will have hope” are not said to invoke doubt concerning the certain hope of the truly repentant, rather they express contrition; a heart posture that acknowledges that one who has sinned is not deserving of forgiveness. Forgiveness is not a right but a gift purchased at the highest of prices. One does not demand an undeserved gift but instead awaits the Giver with absolute humility. Prepared with a heart posture of gratefulness.
 
“Let him put his mouth to the dust and prostrate himself before his Master perhaps there is hope.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:29
 
 יִתֵּ֧ן לְמַכֵּ֛הוּ לֶ֖חִי יִשְׂבַּ֥ע בְּחֶרְפָּֽה
 
3:30 Let him give his jaw to one who would strike him, and let him be satisfied with rebuke.
 
Some translate “cheek” in the sense that the penitent person willing receives the blow of discipline as a slap on the cheek. I’ve translated more literally using “jaw” because the jaw symbolizes the words of the mouth spoken in error. The text is conveying something stronger than a simple stiff slap to the face. It’s denoting a broken jaw that will need resetting so as to establish the renewal of a pure pattern of speech learned from severe discipline. A lesson that will not be unlearned in a hurry.
 
Harsh rebuke is hard to swallow. Thus, only the truly humble can be satisfied by it.
 
 כִּ֣י ל֥אֹ יִזְנַ֛ח לְעבֿלָ֖ם אֲדֹנָֽי׃
 
3:31 For Adonay (the Master) does not cast off forever.
 
It’s wrong to translate this as some do “For no one is cast off by the Lord forever.” First because that is not what the Hebrew text says, and second because it contradicts Scripture (Psalm 37:9-11; Malachi 4:1-3; Daniel 12:2; 1 Cor. 6:9:20; Rev. 20:11-15; 22:15).
 
Adonay does not cast off forever those who receive His atoning sacrificial love in repentance.
 
Specifically in the context of the present text, Israel/Judah is the subject of the casting off, making the casting off through discipline temporary.
 
“For the LORD will not cast off his people, neither will he forsake his inheritance.”
 
-Tehillim (Psalms) 94:14
 
The Targum rightly interprets:
 
“For the Lord will not neglect his servants forever…”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:31a
 
 כִּ֣י אִם־הוֹגָ֔ה וְרִחַ֖ם כְּרֹ֥ב ׳חַסְדּוֹ׳ ״חֲסָדָֽיו׃״
 
3:32 For there is grief, there is also compassion, so great is his unfailing kindness (practiced love).
 
There is grief in affliction and there is also compassion of God poured out in the midst of affliction as He suffers with His people, on behalf of His people, so great is His faithful, practical love. It’s unfailing because He is eternal.

“1 At the same time,” saith the LORD, “will I be the God of all the families of Israel, and they shall be my people.” 2 Thus saith the LORD, “The people which were left of the sword found grace in the wilderness; even Israel, when I went to cause him to rest.” 3 The LORD hath appeared of old unto me, saying, “Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee. 4 Again I will build thee, and thou shalt be built, O virgin of Israel: thou shalt again be adorned with thy tabrets, and shalt go forth in the dances of them that make merry.”

-Y’rmiyahu (Jeremiah) 31:1-4

“But first he breaks and afterwards he turns toward them and has mercy on the righteous in the abundance of his goodness.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:32

 כִּ֣י ל֤אֹ עִסָּה֙ מִלִּבּ֔בֿ וַיַּגֶּ֖ה בְּנֵי־אִֽישׁ׃  
 
3:33 For he does not afflict according to his heart (core being) or grieve the children of a man.
 
The grief that results from sin is not the result of a vindictive God but rather the fruit of humanity’s wilful rebellion.
 
“The Lord is not slack concerning His promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering toward us, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.”
 
-2 Peter 3:9
 
God’s heart desire is to reconcile human beings to Himself in right loving relationship. In keeping with His own nature and the love defined by His holiness, He will not force love on humanity. Thus, while His desire for us is reconciliation to His loving care, those who wilfully and perpetually refuse His offer will receive the grief they have sown for themselves.
 
“For He does not torment wilfully nor cause men grief. From His heart and from His will; rather the sin causes [the grief].”
 
 Rashi on Lamentations 3:33-
 
לְדַכֵּא֙ תַּ֣חַת רַגְלָ֔יו כֹּ֖ל אֲסִ֥ירֵי אָֽרֶץ׃
 
3:34 To crush underfoot all the captives of a land,
 
The next 3 verses indict the wicked actions of those who pervert justice and exposes those evil acts before the all-seeing Creator.
 
This verse specifically reflects the actions of the Babylonians against Judah. But is equally applicable as an observation of the general practice of the empires of men.
 
“And I am very sore displeased with the goyim (heathens; nations other than Israel) who are at ease: for I was but a little displeased, and they helped forward the affliction.”
 
-Zechariah 1:15
  
לְהַטּוֹת֙ מִשְׁפַּט־גָּ֔בֶר נֶ֖גֶד פְּנֵ֥י עֶלְיֽוֹן׃
 
3:35 To pervert judgement of a man before the face of Elyon the Most High,
 
This can be read as an indictment against the injustices committed by Judah. These acts of sin were performed before God’s face. Wilful rebellion.
 
“And perverting the justice of a poor man in the presence of the Most High,”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:35
 
We note that God is Named Elyon, Most High God in His position as God over all things, and thus over the actions of both the Babylonians and Judah/Israel.

 לְעַוֵּ֤ת אָדָם֙ בְּרִיב֔בֿ אֲדֹנָ֖י ל֥אֹ רָאָֽה׃  
 
3:36 To misrepresent a human being in a dispute—does Adonay (the Master) not see such a thing?
 
“You shall not bear false witness!”
 
-Shemot (Exodus) 20:16
 
Here God is Named Adonay (Master), Lord over all the earth and specifically over His people Israel/Judah. He is all seeing and thus sees every act of injustice performed by human beings.
 
 מִ֣י זֶ֤ה אָמַר֙ וַוֶֹ֔הִי אֲדֹנָ֖י ל֥אֹ צִוָּֽה׃
 
3:37 Who can speak something and have it come to pass if Adonay (the Master) has not commanded it?
 
No one can will their way out of a situation by deluding themselves into believing they can manifest their own destiny with their words. Nothing is established unless God allows it. In fact, only what He commands comes to pass.

 מִצִּ֤י עֶלְיבֿן֙ ל֣אֹ תֵצֵ֔א הָרָע֖בֿת וְהַטּֽבֿב׃
  
3:38 Is it not from the mouth of Elyon the Most High that both the bad circumstances (haraot pl.) and the good (v’hatov sg.) come?
 
3:38 Alt. From the mouth of Elyon the Most High does not come both evils (haraot pl.) and the good (v’hatov sg.). [In the sense that God does not mix evil and good together or compromise the good, rather He makes a clear distinction between the two].
 
We note that the evils or calamities are multiple. Thus we read bad circumstances plural and not evil singular. As a counterpoint the good is singular. Therefore, the singular and ultimate good (defined by God’s nature) subjugates and defeats the plural evils. (ref. Amos 3:6)
 
Elsewhere in Scripture we read that God forms Light (all existing in Him) and creates darkness (not all existing but created and subject to light), and that He forms Peace (all existing in Him as part of His nature) and creates from nothing, evil (created and not all existing) [Isaiah 45:6-7].
 
1 John 1:5 says that “God is Light and in Him there is no darkness.” In John’s letter Light is used as a metaphor for God’s pure character and darkness as a metaphor for evil actions. Yaakov (James) 1:13 reminds us that “God cannot be tempted with evil, and He Himself tempts no one.”
 
Therefore, God is not complicit in evil but is the Creator of it. This makes evil, a created thing like darkness, subject to the Creator Who manifests in all existing (not created) Light, manifesting  all existing Peace (not created). 
 
All things exist and have their being in God. The present text along with Isaiah 45:6-7 refute outright the eastern esoteric and Dharmic religious lie that good and evil are equitable forces within the universe. The universe itself also being a created thing and not a deity or person.
 
Within the context of the present lament, the writer is indicating that evil circumstances are allowed to happen only by God’s Word and that they are temporary, while the good remains eternally present because goodness is an attribute of God’s character whereas evil is a subordinate creation.
 
The prophet Iyov (Job) also acknowledges God’s sovereignty over both good and evil circumstances:
 
“But he said unto her, You speak as one of the foolish women speaks. What? shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil? In all this Job did not sin with his lips.”
 
- Iyov (Job) 2:10
 
Ultimately, God orders all things and nothing is permitted outside of His authority because nothing exists outside of God.
 
The alternative reading, which is supported by the Targum, understands the text to be clarifying that God does not muddy the waters between evil and good but makes a clear distinction.
 
“From the mouth of God Most High there does not issue evil, rather by the hint of a whisper, because of the violence with which the land is filled. But when he desires to decree good in the world it issues from the holy mouth.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:38

 מַה־יִּתְאבֿנֵן֙ אָדָ֣ם חָ֔י גֶּ֖בֶר ׳עַל־חֶטְאבֿ׳ ״עַל־חֲטָאָֽיו׃״
  
3:39 Why should a living person complain, a man upon whom sin resides?
 
A person guilty of wilful sin has no right to complain about the affliction caused by his sin. Nor does he have the right to complain concerning the just punishment he receives.
 
 נַחְצְָּ֤שָׂ֤ה דְרָכֵ֙ינ֙וּ֙ וְֽנַחְקָֹ֔רָה וְנָשׁ֖וָּבָה עַד־יְהָֽוָֽה׃
 
3:40 Let us search our ways and test them, and let us turn perpetually to the LORD YHVH (MERCY).
 
This is a call to individual and national repentance. Because God is Holy, Merciful, Gracious, Faithful, Kind and pursues us in right relationship, let us soberly examine our rebellious and sinful ways and turn toward Him from our wicked position of having turned our backs to Him (a delusion). The text says “turn perpetually to the LORD.” Our turning toward Him begins and is ongoing in Messiah our Righteousness.
 
“Search me, El, and know my core being: Try me, and know my conflicting thoughts: And see if there be any wicked, idolatrous way in me, And lead me in the way everlasting.”
 
-Tehillim (Psalms) 139:23-24 [Author’s translation]

 נִשָּׂ֤א לְבָבֵ֙נוּ֙ אֶל־כַּפָּ֔יִם אֶל־אֵ֖ל בַּשָּׁמָֽיִם׃
 
3:41 Let us lift up our hearts (inner person) and our hands to El God in the heavens, saying:
 
Let us willingly expose our filthy hearts that He might cleanse us, and our filthy hands that He might clean them.
 
“Let us lift our cleansed hearts and cast away theft and robbery from our hands. And let us repent before God the dwelling of whose Shekinah is in heaven above.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations

“3 Who may ascend into the mountain of the LORD? or who shall stand in His holy place? 4 He that has clean hands, and a pure heart; who has not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully. 5 He shall receive the blessing from the LORD, and righteousness from the God of his salvation. 6 This is the generation of them that seek Him, that seek Thy face, O Jacob. Selah.”

-Tehillim (Psalms) 24:3-6
 
“After this manner therefore you all should pray: Our Father which art in the heavens, May Your Name by observed and practiced as being Holy.”
 
-Mattisiyahu (Matthew) 6:9
 
 נְַ֤חְנוּ פָשַׁ֙עְנ֙וּ֙ וּמִָ֔רִ֔ינוּ אַוָֹ֖ה ל֥אֹ סָלָֽחְוָֹ׃  
 
3:42 “We have rebelled and have been contentious and you have not forgiven.
 
A sober admission unto repentance. There is no forgiveness in rebellion. Forgiveness is offered to all but only the repentant receive it.
 
 סַכֹּ֤תָה בָאַף֙ וַֽוִֹרְדְּפֵ֔נוּ הָרַ֖גְוָֹ ל֥אֹ חָמָֽלְוָֹ׃
 
3:43 You have fenced Yourself/us with anger and pursued us, slaying us without pity.
 
“You have covered us in anger and pursued us in exile. You have killed and have not pitied.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:43
 
The fence, be it designed to make a distinction between God and sinful Judah or be it to act as a wall of imprisonment for Judah, nonetheless conveys the fierce anger of God’s discipline and wrath against wilful and ongoing sin.
 
The writer is simply making an observation of fact. There is a God established distinction between good and evil, the righteous and the wicked.
 
 סַכּ֤וֹתָה בֶֽעָנָן֙ לָ֔ךְ מֵעֲב֖וֹר תְּפִלָּֽה׃
 
3:44 You have hedged Yourself/us with a cloud so that no prayer can pass through.
 
The cloud is once more reminiscent of the cloud of the presence that both led and dwelt in the midst of Israel as she wandered from Egypt to the land of promise. (ref. Lam. 2:1)
 
Here, as in the previous verse the cloud/hedge acts as a barrier of distinction that refuses the unrepentant pleas of Judah until such a time as her prayers come from a truly humble and utterly contrite heart posture.
 
The Targum pictures this distinction as a barrier to the heavens:
 
“You have covered the heavens with your clouds of glory so that our prayers cannot cross to you.”
 
-Aramaic Targum on Lamentations 3:44
 
When prayers are prayed from the yetzer hara (evil inclination), no matter how pious the sound, they will be refused by God.
 
“I will not hear your prayers!”
 
-Isaiah 1:15, 59:2; Jeremiah 7:16
 
There are a number of clear reasons that God refuses prayers, each of them rooted in ingenuine heart posture:
 
•       Refusing to hear the genuine cry of others
 
“One who shuts his ear to the outcry of the poor will also call out himself, and not be answered.”
 
-Mishlei (Proverbs) 21:13
 
•       Ungodly doubt
 
“But if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all generously and without reproach, and it will be given to him. But he must ask in faith without any doubting, for the one who doubts is like the surf of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind. For that person ought not to expect that he will receive anything from the Lord,”
 
-Yaakov (James) 1:5-7
 
•       Pride
 
“But he gives more grace. Wherefore he says, ‘God resists the proud, but gives grace unto the humble.’”
 
-Yaakov (James) 4:6
 
•       Unjust violence
 
“So when you spread out your hands in prayer, I will hide My eyes from you; Yes, even though you offer many prayers, I will not be listening. Your hands are covered with blood.”
 
-Yeshayahu (Isaiah) 1:15
 
•       Unkindness toward a wife
 
“You husbands in the same way, live with your wives in an understanding way, as with someone weaker, since she is a woman; and show her honour as a fellow heir of the grace of life, so that your prayers will not be hindered.”
 
-1 Peter 3:7
 
•       Selfish motives
 
“You ask and do not receive, because you ask with the wrong motives, so that you may spend what you request on your pleasures.”
 
-Yaakov (James) 4:3
 
•       A dedicated love of sin
 
“If I regard wickedness in my inner person, The Lord will not hear…”
 
-Tehillim (Psalms) 66:18
 
•       Leaders who mistreat God’s people Israel
 
“Then shall the seers be ashamed, and the diviners confounded: yes, they shall all cover their lips; for there is no answer of God.”
 
-Micah 3:7 (ref. Micah 3)
 
Copyright 2025 Yaakov (Brown) Ben Yehoshua
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    Yaakov (Brown) Ben Yehoshua, founder and spiritual leader of the Beth Melekh International Messiah Following Jewish Community, presents a series of in depth studies of books of the Bible. Yaakov approaches the text from a Messianic Jewish perspective, revealing seldom considered translational alternatives and unique insights into the timeless nature of the Word of God as it applies to the redemptive work of the King Messiah Yeshua.

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