Reading
Lamentations 4

1How the gold has become dim!

The most pure gold has changed!

The stones of the sanctuary are poured out

at the head of every street.

2The precious sons of Zion,

comparable to fine gold,

how they are esteemed as earthen pitchers,

the work of the hands of the potter!

3Even the jackals offer their breast.

They nurse their young ones.

But the daughter of my people has become cruel,

like the ostriches in the wilderness.

4The tongue of the nursing child clings to the roof of his mouth for thirst.

The young children ask for bread,

and no one breaks it for them.

5Those who ate delicacies are desolate in the streets.

Those who were brought up in purple embrace dunghills.

6For the iniquity of the daughter of my people is greater than the sin of Sodom,

which was overthrown as in a moment.

No hands were laid on her.

7Her nobles were purer than snow.

They were whiter than milk.

They were more ruddy in body than rubies.

Their polishing was like sapphire.

8Their appearance is blacker than a coal.

They are not known in the streets.

Their skin clings to their bones.

It is withered.

It has become like wood.

9Those who are killed with the sword are better than those who are killed with hunger;

for these pine away, stricken through,

for lack of the fruits of the field.

10The hands of the pitiful women have boiled their own children.

They were their food in the destruction of the daughter of my people.

11Yahweh has accomplished his wrath.

He has poured out his fierce anger.

He has kindled a fire in Zion,

which has devoured its foundations.

12The kings of the earth didn’t believe,

neither did all the inhabitants of the world,

that the adversary and the enemy would enter into the gates of Jerusalem.

13It is because of the sins of her prophets

and the iniquities of her priests,

that have shed the blood of the just in the middle of her.

14They wander as blind men in the streets.

They are polluted with blood,

So that men can’t touch their garments.

15“Go away!” they cried to them.

“Unclean! Go away! Go away! Don’t touch!

When they fled away and wandered, men said among the nations,

“They can’t live here any more.”

16Yahweh’s anger has scattered them.

He will not pay attention to them any more.

They didn’t respect the persons of the priests.

They didn’t favor the elders.

17Our eyes still fail,

looking in vain for our help.

In our watching we have watched for a nation that could not save.

18They hunt our steps,

so that we can’t go in our streets.

Our end is near.

Our days are fulfilled,

for our end has come.

19Our pursuers were swifter than the eagles of the sky.

They chased us on the mountains.

They set an ambush for us in the wilderness.

20The breath of our nostrils,

the anointed of Yahweh,

was taken in their pits;

of whom we said,

under his shadow we will live among the nations.

21Rejoice and be glad, daughter of Edom,

who dwells in the land of Uz.

The cup will pass through to you also.

You will be drunken,

and will make yourself naked.

22The punishment of your iniquity is accomplished, daughter of Zion.

He will no more carry you away into captivity.

He will visit your iniquity, daughter of Edom.

He will uncover your sins.


Devotional

In chapter four there is a stark contrast between what God had provided for his people and what their rebellion had lead them too.  He regarded them as gold and precious gemstones, but they had chosen to be a common clay pot.  God’s people once ate the finest food and now begged for scraps.  The irony of the tragedy was palpable, the people had rejected God’s best for them, thinking their own choices would lead to a better life.  In following their own hedonistic desires that may have held temporary lustre, the damage of a life without boundaries was now being realised.  

 

I met a teenager at a church event once and we got chatting about life.  Her choices had been poor to date, her life had spiralled out of control.  As the time continued she observed a mother telling her child off for some misdemeanour, as she watched I wandered what her reaction would be.  I will never forget the conversation that ensued.  ‘Do you think that mummy is too cross?’ I asked.  Although her disciplining did not escalate beyond a raised voice.  The young girl turned to me and said, ‘I do whatever I want, I go to school or I don’t know one tells me off, I get drunk and no one minds I am allowed to do it.  I could stay out all night with my friends and no one says it’s time for bed’.  The next line was not what I expected.  She looked at me with tears in her eyes and said ‘I wish someone cared enough about me to tell me off when I do something wrong’.  This was a young girl had been devasted by too much freedom and she longed for someone to care enough to set a boundary.

 

God boundaries are not set in harshness but placed in care and love.  Don’t choice to be a clay pot when he regards you as precious gold.