Lamentations 4 - Wesley's Explanatory Notes

Bible Comments
  • Lamentations 4:2 open_in_new

    Earthen pitchers — The nobles, the priests, and the good men, are looked upon no better than earthen vessels, the workmanship of an ordinary potter.

  • Lamentations 4:3 open_in_new

    Cruel — The Jewish women are become cruel to their children, or forced to appear so, having through the famine no milk to give them, nor any thing to relieve them. Ostriches — Like ostriches that lay their eggs, and leave them in the sand.

  • Lamentations 4:6 open_in_new

    Of Sodom — Their punishment was greater, because more lingering, and gradual, whereas Sodom was overthrown in a moment, and that by no human hands that abode upon her, causing her a continued torment.

  • Lamentations 4:7 open_in_new

    Nazarites — Her Nazarites in this place signify her separated ones, who either in respect of birth, education, estate, or place of magistracy, were distinguished from the rest of the people.

  • Lamentations 4:13 open_in_new

    Priests — The ecclesiastical men were a great cause of the first and last destruction of Jerusalem. And so they are of most other places that come to ruin, through their neglect of their duty, or encouraging others in their wicked courses.

  • Lamentations 4:14 open_in_new

    They — The prophets and priests wandered up and down the streets polluting themselves with blood, either the blood of the children which they slew, or the just men, mentioned Lamentations 4:13, the slaughter of whom they either encouraged, or at least did not discourage; so that one could not touch a prophet or priest, but he must be legally polluted, and there were so many of them, that men could not walk in the streets, but he must touch some of them.

  • Lamentations 4:15 open_in_new

    Touch not — The Jews that made conscience of keeping the law against touching dead bodies, cried to the other Jews to leave the city as themselves did, the city being now so full of dead bodies that they could not stay in it without polluting themselves.

  • Lamentations 4:16 open_in_new

    The anger — These words seem to be the language of their enemies triumphing over them. They — Their enemies had no regard to the most venerable persons among them.

  • Lamentations 4:20 open_in_new

    The anointed — Zedekiah, who though a bad man yet afforded some protection to the Jews. We said — We promised ourselves that though the land of Judah was encompassed with Pagan nations, yet through Zedekiah's valour and good conduct we should live comfortably.

  • Lamentations 4:21 open_in_new

    Rejoice — The prophet speaks ironically, Rejoice; but thy joy shall be but for a little time. Drunken — Thou shalt be intoxicated with it, and make thyself naked as drunken men sometimes do.