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God’s Steadfast Love Endures

 3

I am one who has seen affliction

under the rod of God’s wrath;

2

he has driven and brought me

into darkness without any light;

3

against me alone he turns his hand,

again and again, all day long.

 

4

He has made my flesh and my skin waste away,

and broken my bones;

5

he has besieged and enveloped me

with bitterness and tribulation;

6

he has made me sit in darkness

like the dead of long ago.

 

7

He has walled me about so that I cannot escape;

he has put heavy chains on me;

8

though I call and cry for help,

he shuts out my prayer;

9

he has blocked my ways with hewn stones,

he has made my paths crooked.

 

10

He is a bear lying in wait for me,

a lion in hiding;

11

he led me off my way and tore me to pieces;

he has made me desolate;

12

he bent his bow and set me

as a mark for his arrow.

 

13

He shot into my vitals

the arrows of his quiver;

14

I have become the laughingstock of all my people,

the object of their taunt-songs all day long.

15

He has filled me with bitterness,

he has sated me with wormwood.

 

16

He has made my teeth grind on gravel,

and made me cower in ashes;

17

my soul is bereft of peace;

I have forgotten what happiness is;

18

so I say, “Gone is my glory,

and all that I had hoped for from the L ord.”

 

19

The thought of my affliction and my homelessness

is wormwood and gall!

20

My soul continually thinks of it

and is bowed down within me.

21

But this I call to mind,

and therefore I have hope:

 

22

The steadfast love of the L ord never ceases,

his mercies never come to an end;

23

they are new every morning;

great is your faithfulness.

24

“The L ord is my portion,” says my soul,

“therefore I will hope in him.”

 

25

The L ord is good to those who wait for him,

to the soul that seeks him.

26

It is good that one should wait quietly

for the salvation of the L ord.

27

It is good for one to bear

the yoke in youth,

28

to sit alone in silence

when the Lord has imposed it,

29

to put one’s mouth to the dust

(there may yet be hope),

30

to give one’s cheek to the smiter,

and be filled with insults.

 

31

For the Lord will not

reject forever.

32

Although he causes grief, he will have compassion

according to the abundance of his steadfast love;

33

for he does not willingly afflict

or grieve anyone.

 

34

When all the prisoners of the land

are crushed under foot,

35

when human rights are perverted

in the presence of the Most High,

36

when one’s case is subverted

—does the Lord not see it?

 

37

Who can command and have it done,

if the Lord has not ordained it?

38

Is it not from the mouth of the Most High

that good and bad come?

39

Why should any who draw breath complain

about the punishment of their sins?

 

40

Let us test and examine our ways,

and return to the L ord.

41

Let us lift up our hearts as well as our hands

to God in heaven.

42

We have transgressed and rebelled,

and you have not forgiven.

 

43

You have wrapped yourself with anger and pursued us,

killing without pity;

44

you have wrapped yourself with a cloud

so that no prayer can pass through.

45

You have made us filth and rubbish

among the peoples.

 

46

All our enemies

have opened their mouths against us;

47

panic and pitfall have come upon us,

devastation and destruction.

48

My eyes flow with rivers of tears

because of the destruction of my people.

 

49

My eyes will flow without ceasing,

without respite,

50

until the L ord from heaven

looks down and sees.

51

My eyes cause me grief

at the fate of all the young women in my city.

 

52

Those who were my enemies without cause

have hunted me like a bird;

53

they flung me alive into a pit

and hurled stones on me;

54

water closed over my head;

I said, “I am lost.”

 

55

I called on your name, O L ord,

from the depths of the pit;

56

you heard my plea, “Do not close your ear

to my cry for help, but give me relief!”

57

You came near when I called on you;

you said, “Do not fear!”

 

58

You have taken up my cause, O Lord,

you have redeemed my life.

59

You have seen the wrong done to me, O L ord;

judge my cause.

60

You have seen all their malice,

all their plots against me.

 

61

You have heard their taunts, O L ord,

all their plots against me.

62

The whispers and murmurs of my assailants

are against me all day long.

63

Whether they sit or rise—see,

I am the object of their taunt-songs.

 

64

Pay them back for their deeds, O L ord,

according to the work of their hands!

65

Give them anguish of heart;

your curse be on them!

66

Pursue them in anger and destroy them

from under the L ord’s heavens.

 


This is another confirmation of the same truth, that God takes no delight in the evils or miseries of men. It is indeed a strong mode of speaking which the Prophet adopts, but very suitable. God, we know, puts on, as it were, our form or manner, for he cannot be comprehended in his inconceivable glory by human minds. Hence it is that he transfers to himself what properly can only apply to men. God surely never acts unwillingly nor feignedly: how then is that suitable which Jeremiah declares, — that God does not afflict from his heart? But God, as already said, does here assume the character of man; for though he afflicts us with sorrow as he pleases, yet true it is that he delights not in the miseries of men; for if a father desires to benefit his own children, and deals kindly with them, what ought we to think of our heavenly Father?

“Ye,” says Christ, “who are evil,
know how to do good to your children,” (Matthew 7:11;)

what then are we to expect from the very fountain of goodness? As, then, parents are not willingly angry with their children, nor handle them roughly, there is no doubt but that God never punishes men except when he is constrained. There is, as I have said, an impropriety in the expression, but it is enough to know, that God derives no pleasure from the miseries of men, as profane men say, who utter such blasphemies as these, that we are like balls with which God plays, and that we are exposed to many evils, because God wishes to have as it were, a pleasant and delectable spectacle in looking on the innumerable afflict, ions, and at length on the death of men.

That such thoughts, then, might not tempt us to unbelief, the Prophet here puts a check on us, and declares that God does not afflict from his heart, that is, willingly, as though he delighted in the evils of men, as a judge, who, when he ascends his throne and condemns the guilty to death, does not do this from his heart, because he wishes all to be innocent, and thus to have a reason for acquitting them; but. yet he willingly condemns the guilty, because this is his duty. So also God, when he adopts severity towards men, he indeed does so willingly, because he is the judge of the world; but he does not do so from the heart, because he wishes all to be innocent — for far away from him is all fierceness and cruelty; and as he regards men with paternal love, so also he would have them to be saved, were they not as it were by force to drive him to rigor. And this feeling he also expresses in Isaiah,

“Ah! I will take consolation from mine adversaries.”
(Isaiah 1:24.)

He calls them adversaries who so often provoked him by their obstinacy; yet he was led unwillingly to punish their sins, and hence he employed a particle expressive of grief, and exclaimed Ah! as a father who wishes his son to be innocent, and yet is compelled to be severe with him.

But however true this doctrine may be, taken generally, there is yet no doubt but that the Prophet here addresses only the faithful; and doubtless this privilege peculiarly belongs to God’s children, as it has been shown before. It follows, —


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