The Bible Recap - Day 237 (Lamentations 1-2) - Year 4
Episode Date: August 25, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - D-Group Promo Video -... D-Group Map SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we dropped in on the Book of Lamentations.
No one knows who wrote this book, but most people throughout history have connected it to
the major prophet Jeremiah.
It's a book of poetry written as a lament over the destruction of Jerusalem and the Babylonian exile.
So who better to offer up that kind of book than someone known as the Weeping Prophet?
Not only is Jerusalem's destruction the worst thing that has ever happened to the people of Israel by far,
but Jeremiah himself had spent years warning them about it while suffering the consequences of their unwillingness to listen.
Chapter 1 focuses on the destruction of the city of Jerusalem, aka Zion.
The once thriving capital of Judah has been emptied out.
Her enemies rule over her former inhabitants.
They've lost everything.
All along God has been asking them to remember.
And now they finally do, but they don't remember him.
They remember the things they used to have and the piece they used to experience.
Verse 7 says,
Not only did Jerusalem forget what God had done in their past, but they also forget what God has promised for their future. Anytime we choose sin, we fail to consider the future.
Sin occurs when we live so much in the present
that we forget about the eternal kingdom.
Sin is short-sighted.
The Israelites are living in nostalgia for a time
when they'd been disobedient to God.
They longed for the days when things were easier for them,
but if you recall, those were days
when they were sacrificing their children
and worshipping idols at the high places.
This is not exactly righteous mourning.
There is a way to grieve and mourn to the glory of God, but so far in lamentations, this isn't it.
The author goes on to express all the ways God has directed this destruction.
Chapter 1 tells us that God afflicted them.
He inflicted sorrow.
He sent fire.
He thwarted their efforts.
He weakened them and handed them over to their enemies.
And it's true, they're not wrongly blaming God.
God has been telling them all along that he would do these things if they didn't repent.
And the author shows us that Judah finally owns their role in this.
It says,
The Lord is in the right for I have rebelled against His Word.
Not only does this verse remind us that God is just, but it also makes the truths of
verses 12 through 16 bearable.
And in verse 20, it sounds like Jerusalem truly repents.
It says, my heart is rung within me, because I have been very rebellious.
They mourn and grieve their actions, not just the consequences. Meanwhile,
their enemies gloat over what's happening to them. In chapter 2, we get a second poem about the
fall and destruction of Jerusalem. It points out ways that their relationship with God has been
affected by this disaster. Verse 5 says, the Lord has become like an enemy. Like an enemy. He's not
an enemy, but it certainly feels like it to them.
But they know that his actions were justified. He was enacting a necessary discipline for their sins.
The consequences of this discipline reach further than just the destruction of their home.
In addition to that, God himself seems to go radio silent. The prophets have no visions or words from
the Lord. The elders sit on the ground in silence.
When I've been through emotionally challenging situations,
sometimes the only piece I can access is the nearness of God and the comfort of His Word.
If I didn't have that, I would absolutely despair.
I actually experienced that once and it wrecked me.
The silence of God is devastating and it exacerbates the pain of the trials.
If you're in that space right now and you feel alone, you're not alone.
God is drawing near to you even as you fix your eyes on these pages.
The time of your trial does have an end.
Okay, back to Judah.
They know this is all part of God's plan.
Verse 17 says,
The Lord has done what He purposed.
He has carried out His Word,
which He commanded long ago.
Maybe they're finally remembering
that this is what He's been warning them about.
This is not some knee jerk reaction to their sin.
God hasn't lost His temper.
In the midst of Judah's worst tragedy,
I love that we're reminded that God is patient and methodical.
We aren't walking on egg shells around him.
He isn't volatile or unpredictable in that way.
My God shot was the very existence of this book in Scripture.
What does it reveal to us about God that He included this book for us?
I believe it shows us that He is a God who can not only handle our feelings and emotions,
but also values them and wants
to engage with us on that level.
Chapter 2 verse 19 says it like this,
Pour out your heart like water before the presence of the Lord.
These poems contain a lot of feelings and frustrations, and the author pours it out
unguarded before the Lord.
God receives and values our emotions, even when
they're the result of our sins. He wants us to talk with him about what we're feeling.
We've seen all along how he's after our hearts. It doesn't just want a one-dimensional
glossy love. He engages with the good, the bad, and the ugly in our hearts. How else
can he work with us on those levels if we keep the ugly emotions back from him?
Who will speak truth to our struggles if we keep them in the dark?
Throw some light on it, talk to him about it, he will meet you there, and he is where
the joy is.
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