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began last Wednesday, and I decided
this for the next day and four more Sundays for five Sundays
in one to preach from the Book of Lamentations, which has five
chapters will do a chapter a week leading up to Palm Sunday. So
if you will turn in your scriptures to Lamentations chapter one on
your handout. Can somebody bring me a handout?
I forgot to pick one up in the If somebody could grab me one,
that'd be great. Oh, great. Thank you very much.
So on your handouts today, there actually is a couple of versions
of Lamentations 1. And the one, the second one of
those, the one that has this kind of indented form, that's
the version I'll be reading from. So we'll begin. Our Lenten sermons,
our sermons in Lent, by reading Lamentations, chapter 1. Please stand. How lonely sits the city that
was full of people. How like a widow is she who is
great among the nations. The princes among the provinces
has become a slave. She weeps bitterly in the night.
Her tears are on her cheeks. Among all her lovers, she has
none to comfort her. All her friends have dealt treacherously
with her. They have become her enemies.
Judah has gone into captivity, under affliction and hard servitude. She dwells among the nations.
She finds no rest. All her persecutors overtake
her in dire straits. The roads to Zion mourn because
no one comes to the set feast. All her gates are desolate, her
priests sigh, her virgins are afflicted, and she is in bitterness. Her adversaries have become the
master. Her enemies prosper, for the
Lord has afflicted her because of the multitude of her transgressions. Her children have gone into captivity
before the enemy. And from the daughter of Zion,
all her splendor has departed. Her princes have become like
deer that find no pasture, that flee without strength before
the pursuer. In the days of her affliction
and roaming, Jerusalem remembers all her pleasant things that
she had in the days of old when her people fell into the hand
of the enemy with no one to help her. The adversary saw her and
mocked at her downfall. Jerusalem has sinned gravely. Therefore, she has become vile.
All who honored her despise her, because they have seen her nakedness.
Yes, she sighs and turns away. Her uncleanness is in her skirts. She did not consider her destiny. Therefore, her collapse was awesome. She had no comforter. O Lord,
behold my affliction, for the enemy is exalted. The adversary has spread his
hand over all her pleasant things, for she has seen the nations
enter her sanctuary, those whom you commanded not to enter your
assembly. All her people sigh. They seek
bread. They have given their valuables
for food to restore life. See, O Lord, and consider, for
I am scorned. Is it nothing to you, all you
who pass by? Behold, and see if there is any
sorrow like my sorrow, which has been brought on me, which
the Lord has inflicted in the day of His fierce anger. From
above He has sent fire into my bones, and it overpowered them. He has spread a net for my feet
and turned me back. He has made me desolate and faint
all the day. The yoke of my transgressors
was bound. They were woven together by his
hands and thrust upon my neck. He made my strength fail. The
Lord delivered me into the hands of those whom I am not able to
withstand. The Lord has trampled underfoot
all my mighty men in my midst. He has called an assembly against
me to crush my young men. The Lord trampled as in a winepress
the virgin daughter of Judah. For these things I weep. My eye,
my eye overflows with water because the comforter who should restore
my life is far from me. My children are desolate because
the enemy prevailed. Zion spreads out her hands, but
no one comforts her. The Lord has commanded concerning
Jacob that those around him become his adversaries. Jerusalem has
become an unclean thing among them. The Lord is righteous,
for I rebelled against his commandment. Hear now, all peoples, and behold
my sorrow. My virgins and my young men have
gone into captivity. I called for my lovers, but they
deceived me. My priests and my elders breathed
their last in the city while they sought food to restore their
life. See, O Lord, that I am in distress. My soul is troubled. My heart
is overturned within me, for I have been very rebellious.
Outside the sword bereaves, and at home it is like death. They
have heard that I sigh, but no one comforts me. All my enemies
have heard of my troubles. They are glad that you have done
it. Bring on the day you have announced that they may become
like me. Let all their wickedness come
before you and do to them as you have done to me for all my
transgressions, for my size are many and my heart is faint."
Let's pray. Father, we thank you for this
piece of Holy Scripture. We thank You that in Your providence
it is the text that we will be transformed by, healed by, and
brought hope through. Bless us, Lord God, as we consider
this text. Give us clarity. Help us to understand
the opening of this book that has so much sorrow in it. And
help us, Lord God, to respond to that book the way Your Spirit
would have us. In Jesus' name we ask it. Amen. Please be seated. Well, it's not going to get better
either. There's no happy ending in lamentations. Next week will get a lot worse. So, what is this book doing in
our Bibles? Why does Pastor Terry want us to think about it so
hard? Interesting for me, because my
life, the last two days, I spent listening to some other very
difficult things. I went to a justice conference
in Portland. One of the last talks we heard,
for instance, was about the Congo, where Lynn Hybels, who was interviewing
the head of World Relief in the next last session last night
was talking and spent some time bringing attention the world
to the Congo, where 90% of the women have been raped in violent
warfare. You know, where where death is
common, where poverty is intense, and yet also where planes arrive
and leave daily, taking away some of the most precious minerals
and resources that the world needs from the Congo. You know,
these are hard things to listen to. Last talk last night was
Francis Chan trying to describe how, why he chose to give away
so much of what he had to try to stop the sex slavery in Thailand
and in Cambodia, Sri Lanka, other places. And people tried to tell
him, no, Francis, you've got to take care of yourself. You
might have an emergency. And he said, an emergency? Children
are being raped daily in these countries. Rich men fly in and
do horrific things to these kids who end up killing themselves
or addicted to drugs, whatever it is. I should wait for I should
save up my money for an emergency, he said. Isn't that an emergency? So I heard a lot of those kind
of hard stories. Heard about American Indians
here going from 20 million down to about 230,000. And how, you
know, and you probably know, but you know how often Indians
and Native Americans in America are addicted to drinking. They're
drunkards and they have tremendously high suicide rates. I mean, it's
sad, sad, sad. You know, some of these things
we heard last night. Lamentations. You know, kind of wants us to
come face to face with pain and suffering and trials. And as
we'll look in a minute, it's not just the same. It's not just
that kind of pain and suffering that results because of a direct
reaction of our sins. We'll see that it gets broader
than that here. That's specifically what's happening here. Lamentations
is set in the context where Jeremiah, undoubtedly Jeremiah, is writing
at the end of the sack of Jerusalem in 586. that, you know, it finally
goes into captivity and all those children, the mother is bereaved
because the kids are marched off to captivity. And, you know,
in the process of that two year deal, there was a siege put against
Jerusalem and mothers ate their babies. I mean, it was bad, bad,
bad, bad. Then this book of Lamentations
is a lamentation over tremendous suffering in the fall of Jerusalem. And, you know, the fact that
it is a lamentation, And the fact that, as you heard just
in chapter one, there are these various cries to God that exist
in the context of that lamentation, sort of sets us up for the basic
idea of this book and why it's so important to us and why it's
a particularly good time during Lent to go through this particular
book. Pain, suffering, trials. This is part of the fallen human
condition. And sometimes it's because of
our own sin. Sometimes it's because of other
people's sins. You heard here, they said, well,
due to our persecutors, what they did to us. And that's a
righteous prayer that they're praying because they know that
the people that come in and sack them and there'll be God's judgment
against them, they themselves deserve God's judgment. And it
reminds us that sometimes the pain and suffering and trial
we go through is because of other people's sins. Those women being
raped in the Congo, they're suffering not because of their sin. They're
suffering because other people are sinning. Chapter three of
this will turn to in a few minutes, but it's very significant because
there's a whole change of speaking. A man starts to speak and I'm
convinced the man is speaking at the middle of chapter of this
book. Chapter three is Jeremiah himself. his suffering is layered
into this book of suffering and pain and trial. He wasn't suffering
for his sins, he was suffering relative to the sins of the people.
But you know what happened to him? They hated him, they threw
him in a pit, they beat him. I mean, his suffering is included
here in the middle of this book. So don't, you know, I think that
this book is not for you or or don't think the pastor Terry
is trying to convince us all that we're sitting and that's
why we're suffering. This book is about pain. All
kinds of different sorts of pain and suffering and trials. And
this book is about prayer. It's the response in prayer that
we see here. Now it's not fair. That's immediately
answered. The book doesn't end happy. The
book ends with the nation still suffering with the pain intense. And that's often what our lives
are like. This book is really sort of preparation, at least
for that portion of our lives that I know we all share, where
we enter into pain and suffering, depression, betrayal of friends,
isolation, whatever it is, the things that causes the most difficult
pain and suffering. And this book is for us. This
book helps us. There'll be hope in this book.
I will see that but but but understand first, this book is about pain
and it's about prayer. We come to it. That's what left
sort of is about. Lent is a consideration, kind
of a meditation on suffering and sins, but suffering not for
sins as well. You know, Lent starts with Fat
Tuesday and in our particular culture, right? Mardi Gras. And
actually, in liturgical churches, it does start with Tuesday, but
it's a completely different Tuesday. It's not a day of Fat Tuesday,
indulge the flesh, and then you enter into the fast. Carnival,
death to flesh, because you just let your flesh do whatever you
want to do on Fat Tuesday, and everything goes wild and crazy.
It's chaos, and then new life will come the next day. No, it
isn't like that. Tuesday is called Shrove Tuesday in liturgical
churches and their tradition. typically be a pancake breakfast.
You do eat a little better than that. If you're going to do maybe
a fast for perhaps doing well, but it shrove Tuesday and to
strive. Someone needs to hear their confession.
So actually, instead of fact Tuesday, it is a day to rejoice,
but it's a day to confess your sins to appease to be tried in
preparation for a further consecration of land and a remembering of
sufferings and trials. I'll let us 40 days long, because
in the Bible, 40 days is always the precursor to victory. You
know, you're 40. Jesus, 40 days in the wilderness.
He comes back and he gets at it. It's at the ministry. There
are 40 years in the wilderness. The people of Israel, then they're
going to conquer the land. So, you know, it's not it's preparation
for something. It's a consideration of suffering
and pain and our sins and all that stuff. And it's a way to
process that instead of trying to always forget about it. You
know, we hear those stories about, you know, the Congo or the sex
slaves in Thailand, and we just kind of want to forget about
all of that. We may even hear stories about, you know, people
suffering in Oregon City, and we tend to just kind of block
it out of our minds a lot, or we can. We're kind of tempted
to do that. Well, that is a time to kind of not do that explicitly
to think about suffering. Think about our own sufferings.
Think about other people's sufferings. Think about the sufferings of
the world and to process those things properly in preparation
for victory. It's kind of interesting, by
the way. One of the presentations we went to, we went to an art
advocacy dinner. And I don't remember, maybe it's
World Vision, I don't remember now who the guy was from, but
there's a website and they're going to come up with six weeks
of creative ideas using art to try to make Lent a special time
for the people that use their services. And the first one they're
going to launch this Wednesday is, the practical idea is, go
home, take all the paintings off the walls of your house.
And then redecorate those walls in a way that will be motivating
you to do something about the suffering of the world. Interesting,
creative ways to do things. Well, let's kind of like that,
right? The time that we try to put off our sins. We have those
sin stones back there on the table back there. The idea is,
you know, maybe put in your pocket. Think about it. Gee, I really
know that sin is bad. It's dishonoring to God and my
neighbor. I really want to try hard this
period of time to get rid of that, realizing that it's a redstone,
right? It's the blood of Jesus Christ
that gives you freedom. from your hand, but there it
is so that this is pretty good forty days, but it's actually
forty six. Why? Because on Sunday you don't fast. Sunday is a day of joy. We're
going to come to this table. We don't put up the table for
the time of Lent. So Lent being forty days in the
midst context of forty six is a reminder that while Lamentations
doesn't end with resolution. Resolution is surely found in
the coming of Jesus Christ that celebrated the intrusion of the
kingdom of God at which all things are being put to rights. Suffering
and injustice is being done away with. That is intruded into the
human condition. And we remember that by not fasting
and not by and by changing the day or the pattern of the day
in the context of the Lord's Day during this period of time.
So that's kind of where we're at. That's why I'm talking about
lamentations. That's what I want to do here.
And I want to make just a couple of simple points this morning
about lamentations. And the first one is, is that
lamentations is about lamenting. You know, it is the proper place
of lamenting in the life of the Christian. And, you know, last
week at the supper, I talked about grumbling and disputing,
trying to be light bearers by not grumbling or disputing. And
in a way, this is the counterbalance to that, right? So in the Bible,
you know, there are these statements, but then you got to be careful
how you frame those statements, because lamentations and all
kinds of other scriptures, what they make quite clear is there's
nothing wrong with crying out to God in the midst of pain and
difficulty. And in fact, there's something very wrong if pain
and trouble that you're going through kept you from prayer.
Now, that's, you know, evidence of unbelief. So, lamentations
is about lamenting. And it is a proper thing. It's an essential part of the
Christian life to lament certain things. And I mention these global
things that we should be lamenting. And there are things going on
in America that we should be lamenting. Not many people at
this conference, they talked about, you know, sex slaves and
they talked about, you know, the Congo and Native American
Indians. Nobody, none of the speakers,
the plenary speakers, a couple of workshop people did. Talked
about the thing we're supposed to be lamenting here. If 20 million
Indians have been killed or died in America in the last 50 years,
you know, there's double that number of pre-born babies that
have been killed, right? We'll talk more about that next
week. We'll see the death of babies next week in the Fallen
City. There's stuff to lament. And there's stuff that we don't
even know why we're lamenting it. Look at the sort of things
that are lamentable in this song. Let's just start in this Book
of Lamentations. Look at verse 1. Loneliness is the list. How lonely sits the city that
was full of people. How like a widow is she. He was
great among the nations. Now, probably referring to the
siege that Babylon put up around Jerusalem. People couldn't come
in and out. She'd already taken away most of the inhabitants
to captivity, right? Over a couple of different times
in the years leading up to this. But what is the imagery given
to us? Well, first of all, the image is the city is a woman.
Now, that puts it immediately in a vulnerable position, right? The fellow from World Relief
yesterday was talking about men and women, and he's like 6'1
or something, big guy, and his wife is 5'2, and she was telling
him the other day, you just don't get it. What do you mean? Well,
you know, when I go outside and walk around the streets, when
I go on the mission field with you and I'm not with you, I feel
very vulnerable. I'm 5'2, I'm a little person.
People do what they want to with me. He said, every day I feel
vulnerable. and she asked how often you feel
vulnerable once or twice last year. So the fact that this is
a woman increases the vulnerability aspect, but particularly because
it personifies Jerusalem as an individual. This individual begins
first to talk about pain and suffering in terms of isolation
or loneliness. She's alone. Now, you know, that
is the modern condition for so many people. Isolation, loneliness,
absence of community. This place right here is a place
where people can feel most alone. Because here we promise community. Here we're with people that are
supposedly blood brothers and sisters. But people can come
here and they can find themselves on the edges of what we are.
alone. That's real suffering. That begins
the sort of suffering that's being talked about in Lamentations. Now of course there's physical
pain, people being killed, but just to read what it says here
as it begins. What's the next verse says? Well,
she weeps bitterly in the night, her tears are on her cheeks.
Depression, we can say. Depression leads to great weeping. Later in this, the woman will
say that she's greatly anxious. She's tremendously anxious. She
has psychological suffering as a result of the things that the
Lord has put her through. I'm not trying to ignore the
specific situation of the captivity, but I'm just telling you that
when God gets around to describing what that pain and suffering
that's being lamented here, that she's crying out to God about,
When he gets around to discussing the specifics, the specifics
are put in ways that you and I can easily identify with it. Loneliness. Anxiety. Depression. Tears. That's where it starts. Look
at the next one in the last second half of verse two. Among all
her lovers, she has none to comfort her. The absence of people comforting
us. Have you gone through this? I
go through it all the time. I know a lot of people in this
church do. No one's comforting me. Now, maybe they don't know
their lives are busy. You know, I don't know. I'm not
trying to make everyone feel guilty, but I'm just telling
you this book has all kinds of stuff in it that's quite practical
for you to enter into lamentation over your particular state of
being lonely or isolated, of being depressed, weeping. or being comfortless, no friends
to comfort you. It gets worse, though. These
are just fused opening verses, right? But look, what does it
go on to say? No one to comfort her. And look,
all her friends, she had friends, have dealt treacherously with
her. Oh, who hasn't gone through that?
The suffering that, you know, this is discussing the beginning
specific elements of what she's lamenting about. And this is
experience that is written in such a way to bring you into
the test. Now you didn't live in Jerusalem
during the time of the captivity. You weren't getting killed. The
Babylonians aren't at your door and all that stuff. But see,
it's describing this in a way that you, the church, for thousands
of years can read this text. And we can acknowledge our sufferings,
our trials, our tears, our loneliness, our isolation. We can see it
here. God wants us to see it here.
And so the loss of friends, friends who were friends, Bob Dylan,
I thought some of them were friends of mine. I was wrong about them
all. You know, old age, it kind of becomes like that. I don't
know what it is. Life gets tough. People fall
off. The old buzz just doesn't work anymore. You young people
know this too. Teenagers particularly go through
these weird changes in your attitudes and actions and hormones. You
got a friend and then your friend's not hanging out with you anymore
and their act of action kind of treacherously tore you and
giving you the stink eye or whatever it is. That's sad. That's sorrowful. But it gets
worse, right? So her friends, no one's comforting
her. Her friends don't comfort her.
Her friends actually are treacherous. Whoa! They have become my enemies! Her enemies, the prophet says
here. Not only are they treacherous,
they actually now are plotting against you. You ever have that
happen? A friend not only, you know,
stops hanging out, not only gets a little funky toward you, but
now you know, you hear, they're actually your enemy now. That's
it. I know a lot of you have had that. Well, you know what?
That's something we're supposed to be lamenting before God for.
There's all kinds of stuff here that takes it beyond just this
particular historic situation. And it kind of helps us to remember
that, you know, the big deal isn't just the historical situation. The lamentation is for things
that are common to man and we can enter into those things.
And I know some of you. I mean, I know people. I know
some of you this last week. Tears. Feeling completely alone. Isolated. What's the point? What's
going on? Feeling abandoned. Why don't
I have the old friendships that I had? I know you're going through
it. See? And you're here because God's
called you here to allow you to lament and cry out to God
for that sorrow that you have. And as this comes about, to you
in your life, you're supposed to limit that stuff. You're supposed
to limit that stuff. Now, I mentioned, and so you're
saying, well, yeah, Dennis, yeah, but that's Zion. She was mean,
evil and wicked, and she was bad, right? So, you know, yeah,
yeah, I guess maybe I can make an application, but mean, wicked,
bad. Well, look at Lamentations chapter three. If you have your
Bibles, look at chapter three. Now, as you're turning there,
I'll tell you that the way this this book works is there are
several major actors and we'll talk about this in more detail.
But you got the prophet that speaks right. And then you've
got Zion. the woman, the city, identified
as Zion, and she speaks. The prophets speak 70% of the
verses are the prophets speaking. 15% of the verses, Zion speaking. And another 15%, the congregation,
not Zion singular, but now the city corporately is speaking. That's another 15%. These are
very precise delineations. And it sets us up for what's
happening here. There's a series of actors. playing
the sounds like a play. In fact, I have a new translation
of Lamentations where they get actors and they act the thing
out. And when Zion's speaking, it's a woman. Ah, she's lamenting
out. And when the prophet's speaking,
it's a man's voice. And the congregation's speaking,
it's multiple voices speaking together. Well, that's the way
this kind of works. Now, this is still the prophet
speaking, but now something different happens. He says, I am the man
who has seen affliction. Now, see, The rest of this book,
the one that's seeing affliction and lamenting is the woman. It's
the woman, it's Zion, it's Jerusalem, it's the congregation identified
as a woman. But now the prophet is still
speaking, right? It doesn't say she's the woman,
but now he's identifying himself, the prophet is, as the man who
has seen affliction under the rod of his wrath. He has driven
and brought me into darkness without any light. That is literally
true. They threw Jeremiah in a pit
and covered it over. Okay. Now, you know, it's symbolically
is the language that we can identify with. Not many of us are actually
thrown into a pit, but that's what they did to that guy. Okay.
He's discussing his own suffering. Surely against me he turns his
hand again and again the whole day long. He has made my flesh
and my skin waste away. He has broken my bones. He has
besieged and enveloped me with bitterness and tribulation. He
has made me dwell in darkness like the dead of long ago. He
has walled me about so that I cannot escape. He has made my chains
heavy. Though I call and cry for help,
he shuts out my prayers. He has blocked my ways with blocks
of stone. He has made my paths crooked.
Now, that's Jeremiah speaking. and the wrath of God that he's
experiencing is being poured out on him, so to speak, but
it's not his sin. He's the one calling Jerusalem
to repentance, but he's also a picture of the weeping prophet
and the judgment of God on them. But so he's suffering, but he's
not suffering for his own sin. He's not doing anything wrong.
He's just the prophet and this is what God has called him to
do. Kind of like Job. Job could say the same stuff.
I'm suffering. It wasn't for my sin. And he'd
be absolutely right. So you see, we're brought into
this book of lamentations very explicitly by Chapter 3 by implication
by those opening verses of Chapter 1, because the stuff that's being
described is stuff that's common to our sufferings. One other
thing before we move on from this, the lamentation certainly
is in the part of Jerusalem for sins. But what's interesting
about the book of Lamentations, unlike other prophetic books,
is not specific sins that are named. don't tell us you're stealing
from poor people, doesn't tell us you were sleeping with different
girls or different guys, whatever it is, doesn't really tell us
that. The sin is left unspecified. Why? Well, one reason for that
is that you and I who have sin, it applies to us too. If it's
specific sin, well then we say, well we didn't do that. But it
applies to us. So whether we're sinning or not
sinning, You know, whether we're going through specifically what
she's going through in terms of deportation or whatever it
is, this book is about you and I, whether we're sitting or not
sitting. And this book is about the same sort of sufferings that
bring you to tears, bring you to exhaustion, bring you to a
loss of hope in the person and work of God. This book is good
for you. It's good for you and God wants
you to recognize that. Now, I want to talk about one
other aspect of this book, and that is there's this form of
stuff going on. And I know some of you don't
like this, but you know. But just a couple of quick comments
and you can examine the handout I give you later. This book is
has five poems. They're beautifully constructed.
they're probably I think the most well-constructed are beautifully
constructed carefully constructed piece of Scripture. Why do I
say this? Well, there's five chapters. Chapter one begins as an acrostic. You know, so an acrostic, it's
22 verses. First verse starts with Aleph,
second verse starts with Beth. It goes right through the Hebrew
alphabet, same way Psalm 119 does. It's an acrostic. I mean, it's written by chance. You can't buy chance for an acrostic.
It's very carefully constructed. And I've given you a copy. I
think on the next page is the Knox translation, which is a
Roman Catholic Bible. I'm not pushing the translation,
but it's one of the few. The only one I know that actually
tries to maintain that acrostic appearance. You see how it does
that. So, the first verse is translated
by the first word alone. The second word, you got that
bold B. Third verse, C, D, E. Now, there's only 22 letters
in the Hebrew alphabet, so it doesn't go all the way to Z.
But you see, that's what it does. And if you have a Knox Bible,
it does that in chapter one. It does that in chapter two.
In chapter three, it doesn't. It's a little different in chapter
three. It's got sixty six verses. And with each letter, there are
three verses that begin with a three and begin with being
three and begin with seeing if you have sixty six verses. Chapter
four, twenty two verses back to twenty two, and it's an acrostic
as well. A through the twenty second letter
of the Hebrew alphabet. Chapter five. No. No acrostic. It stops. So, we have this beautiful structuring
of the book along acrostic lines, stops. Now, another thing that's
going on in this book is concentric parallelism, responses, chiasms. And without taking a lot of time,
I've tried to show on the second page of your handout, you know,
you've got to look at it now, but very specific words are matched
up from the top to the bottom. And it leads us to a particular
center. So, that's another thing that
happens. The writer has very carefully
constructed that poem in a chiastic fashion. Chapter 2, next week,
I'll show you the same thing in that one. And I know it's
hard to distinguish this because I'm doing several things on this
handout here. One is the chiastic pairing of words as we go toward
the middle. And there's a couple of things
we'll talk about in a minute. But chapter one, chiasm, chapter
two, chiasm. But by the last couple of chapters
of the book, no chiasms, they're gone. The acrostic goes away. The beautiful structuring of
the poem chiastically goes away. The third device that she uses
is called concatenation. A big word, it means chaining.
And I'm trying to show you a little bit of this in the first few
verses of chapter one. But so here's the idea, right?
So I got chapter one, verse one, verse two, verse three, verse
four. There's a repeated word in verse
one and verse three. They tie together, jumping around
verse two. There's a repeated word from
verse two to verse four. And there's a repeated word in
verse three to verse five. So three looks back to one and
it looks forward to five. OK, so this is called chaining
training and it's a literary structure. It's a it's a beautiful
thing. You know, you like to see kind
of chains up. You know, in various times to
decorate with chains and the the author here has written this
with one and three and three and five and five and seven and
seven and nine, two and four and four and six and six and
eight. By use of these common terms, he's chaining the thing
together. It's like a beautiful chain of
a couple of strands. Well, chapter two has a simple
chain. One and two are like two and
three of a common word, three and four. It's not doubled up
like this. It's just like this. You understand? If you can't understand the specifics,
just understand that the chapter one, it's like a chain with this
beautiful kind of every other deal going down through. Chapter two is like a very simple
chain, a double chain, simple chain. Chapter three, you know
how many chains there are? None. Goes away. Now why would
an author here, God, using the author, have obvious chiasms,
obvious chains, and obvious acrostics, and not finish it through? Do
you get tired? No. God doesn't get tired. This is
a beautiful work of art with five very clearly isolated poems. Well, I think that the literary
structure itself is about exactly what the book is about. The loss
of beauty. We read in verse six and it's
the theme verses. You come in that Zion's glory
has totally gone away. Her Majesty, Her Beauty has departed. Bob Dylan's Cold Iron's Vow. Such a sad thing to see beauty
decay and death. That's what death is. You know,
when the flower starts to fade, right? Bought my wife some roses
for Valentine's Day and beauty decays. That starts to fall apart. I'm old. Beauty is decaying. I'm falling apart. I'm falling to the ground. Everybody
gets shorter. You're starting to become dust.
Beauty decays, right? And when God judges us, beauty
decays. There's a beauty of relationships. There's a beauty to the body
of Christ embracing each other and embracing the isolated particularly.
Beauty decays in the Book of Lamentations and sometimes in
our lives. Relationships with our community
decay. There's a beauty to friendships.
And when friendships go away, and not just go away, they become
treacherous enemies of ours. There's a complete loss of beauty
and ugly, ugly, ugliness now grips the world. And there is
a loss of beauty When young girls are being forced into sexual
slavery, committing suicide, being killed, becoming addicted
to drugs, there is a horrific ugliness to that that should
completely offend our sensibilities. We should get mad about it. You
know, Jesus, the gospel is the good news that all that crap
that God had a way that for a while it's stopping now. And for the
last few days, it's evident the Church of Jesus Christ is saying
this will stop. We will continue to work we will
mobilize resources, we will lament before God for the ugliness of
what's going on in the Congo and Sri Lanka, Cambodia, and
what's going on in America with the killing of pre-born babies,
and what's going on in America with meth addiction, with prostitution,
with sexual sin, and yes, with young girls being brought into
servitude to that through you know, wise older guys who manipulate
these young girls. There's an ugliness to all of
that. God says we should want beauty.
We should want to get back to the beautiful chain. We should
want to get back to the lovely, chastic structure of the poem.
We should want to get back to the acrostic beauty of those
poems. It's all falling apart. It falls
apart because of sin, primarily. God says that Lent is a reminder
of what happens when death comes. Things get ugly. They deteriorate. Beauty decays. What happens with
you when you've got a relationship with a buddy or a girlfriend
or whatever it is, and somehow you haven't really kept it up
and maybe you're even become treacherous. It is ugly. It is an ugly thing to have people
in this congregation who feel pretty much alone. It's uglier
still if we're not looking out for those kind of people and
trying to embrace them in community. I'm not, you know, I'm not bringing
something into the text. That's what it starts with in
Lamentations 1. How lonely is the city? How lonely there can be folks
in this church? I'm not thinking of us particularly.
It's the luxury of all churches. But I want us to see that this
stuff is ugliness. It's the decay of beauty. And
God wants us to be people that are beautifying the world, putting
the world to rights. N.G. Wright's kind of definition
of justice, right? Righteousness is faithfulness
to put the world to rights. Well, when we put the world to
rights, it's like that beautiful poetry that's chiastic and a
chain and an acrostic all at the same time in chapter one.
It's all there. calling us to do. What do you
think of yourself as an artist or not? When you cry out to God
and you try to do something about what's happening in your life
here, the life of Oregon City, the life of Oregon, United States,
foreign countries, whatever it is, you are an artist bringing
the beauty of God's proper ordering of things, which is never some
kind of sterile, rationalistic deal. It's got chaining poetry. It's got acrostics. It's got
concentric responses. It's got beauty to it. God cooks,
man. He makes beautiful things. You
go outside. It's beautiful, right? God calls us to lament before
Him for the ugliness in the world. He calls us to, you know, be
honest with ourselves about the ugliness in our lives. And whether
some of our sin has brought about that ugliness in our lives and
the lives of others. God says, bring beauty out of
the loss of beauty here, right? Bring beauty. You know, it's
interesting because God says, in spite of all these difficulties,
his whole deal is hope. I want to read you something
just fascinating. Oh, boy. Let's see. I hope I
can find it quickly. I know I'm going a little bit
long. But believe me, this is dynamite. I won't get to that
fourth element of the structure. We'll talk about that next week.
I'm sorry. It's another beautiful structuring device that's going
on to the text. We'll talk about that next week.
But I need to move on to the last point about hope and hopelessness. Listen to this verse. Now, remember,
in this particular context, the one that is got ugliness going
on and horrific bad things happening to me. Girls are being right. That's a clear image of this
test by the invading armies. They're breaking down the walls
or having their way with the girls. The girls are in, you
know, still pull over their skirts. Babies will be eaten by their
mothers. The young people have been taken
away to captivity. Daniel, he's gone, right? Daniel
had a mother, you know, so I mean, really horrible things have happened.
and it's because the limitations makes it very clear, and of course
we know our Bibles, we know why. It's because they're wicked,
sinful people. They won't evangelize the world,
they won't care, even for themselves, they enslave one another. The
exact opposite of God's grace in showing, you know, God is
always extending himself to people, and they're closing themselves
off to people, enslaving people in Jerusalem. They're ripping
off the poor, not ignoring them. They're positively thinking of
ways to rip them off through court systems, oppressive systems,
whatever it is, okay? They're really in deep sin here
against God. And they're doing all kinds of
sexual stuff that's improper. They're bad, okay? They're basically
excommunicated, is what being kicked out of the land is about.
God, their king, isn't there going to be there with them anymore.
They're excommunicated. That's these people. Don't get some
romantic view of them. They're bad, evil people. That's
why these things are happening. Lamentations makes that clear.
Now listen to what Jeremiah says about this. Astonishing. Really
not astonishing, but Lamentations 2.13. What can I say for you?
To what compare you, O daughter of Jerusalem? What can I liken
you to? that I may comfort you. How can I comfort you? He said, O virgin daughter of
Zion, your ruin is vast as the sea. Who can heal you? What can
I think? How can I comfort you, Jeremiah? This is chapter three or this
chapter two, but it's the prophet talking. How can he comfort these
people? Why did Jeremiah write the book?
to tell us what mad, bad, horrible jerks they are, hate them forever.
No, Jeremiah writes the book to try to comfort the horrific
grief that Jerusalem has been brought to because of her sins. Because of her sins. Who do we
comfort? Who do we want to bring comfort
to? We want to bring comfort to people who suffer. This is
not an antinomian kind of comfort. I haven't lost my brain at this
justice conference. Because what lamentations does,
Jeremiah tells these Jews that the way you find your voice,
the way you lament before God is including in the lamentation
and you're crying out and you're suffering a recognition that
he has justly judged you for your sins. In their case, There's
not going to be hope if they don't bring that fact out. So
he's not anti-nomian here, but he is trying to comfort these
people. Are we trying to comfort? Remember, the excommunicates,
they're worse, right, than the average guy out there, the average
sinner. Excommunicates, we treat them even more, you know, hand-offish.
And even in the excommunicates, Jeremiah is seeking to comfort
them. And he's writing us something
here that teaches us how to comfort people in our lives. What do
we do? When we come across drug addicts,
people sleeping all over the place, with all kinds of people
or things, whatever they're doing, right? What's our instinct to
the tremendous sorrow that exists in the context of communities
such as ours? is our instinct to comfort them.
It should be. It should be. Like I said, that
doesn't it's not some kind of antinomian thing, but we need
to help people who are suffering because of the rebellion against
Jesus, even even those people, we need to help them find their
voice in the Book of Lamentations. We need to bring them to know
that they can lament before God. And there is hope in the Lord
God. There is hope. We know it because
we've been brought to the end of hope. Jeremiah says that later
in this in chapter three. He says, you know, my strength
was gone. My strength was gone and I couldn't even hope in the
Lord anymore. He says in the middle of chapter three. And
then right after that, he says, but the Lord is faithful. Great
is my faithfulness. That song built on a text from
Lamentations. The Lord is faithful. His mercies
are new every morning. He is the one who indeed I can
hope in, even when I feel hopeless. Lamentations helps us find our
voice in the midst of horrible struggles and trials and deep
depressions that we cannot understand and real treacheries that we
can understand all too well from friends around us. Right. Lamentations
helps us to find our voice, to cry out to God the proper way.
Lamentations tells us that part of our voice is seeking to comfort
the people of this world who are suffering in great distress,
whether for their sin or for somebody else's sin or just the
circumstances of the matter. Our every instinct should be
to extend ourselves to them and to help them find their voice
in this book. Not denying pain, suffering,
difficulties, trials, and not denying in many cases their own
sin as the basis for it, but finding their voice of complaint
and lamentation before God and bring them to the place that
we have been had to brought to. I have no strength in me as Jeremiah
said. And you know what that means?
The only one that can save me is God. The God who has sent
his son to die for our sins. As people find their voice in
Lamentations, they find there is no hope in themselves. But that is the great turning
point to achieve hope, because it draws us to the hope of the
God who doesn't end with a happy ending yet. But the happy ending
is precisely what's been bought for us by the great mercies and
ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ. Lamentations is a real important
book. And I hope that as we continue to go through it the next four
weeks, You'll pray for me. You'll pray for yourself that
we understand it, that we delight in it, that we see the lessons
that are laid out for us, that we find our voice in lamentations
and we help this world find its voice as well. Let's pray. Lord
God, we thank you for this book. We thank you for opening it up
to us this morning. We thank you for the beauty in it. Father,
please forgive us for being such dispensers of ugliness all too
often in relationships or relying upon political solutions to things
that only you can do. Bless us, Lord God, as we seek
to be artists, living a life of obedience and hope and care,
extending ourselves to those who suffer around us. Help us
not to be so focused on Bangladesh. that we forget about the person
in this room that's suffering in loneliness. And help us not
to become so introspective that we forget the horrific things
going on in Thailand and Cambodia and Sri Lanka. Bless us, Lord
God, that no matter where we turn and what we do with our
hands, that we do it this week as people that are restoring
the beauty of a fallen world. In Jesus' name we ask it. Amen.
All Her Splendor Has Departed
Series Lamentations
Lamentations 1
All Her Splendor Has Departed
Sermon Outline for February 26, 2012, the First Sunday in Lent, by Pastor Dennis Tuuri
Intro –The Church Calendar, Pancakes, Ashes, 46 Days, and Lent
6And from the daughter of Zion All her splendor has departed
I. Lamentations - Lamenting the Lamentable (Including Chapter 3)
II. The Beautiful Poetry of the Book of Lamentations (Dr. Kai Soltau, Robert Jones)
A. Acrostic - Knox Translation, Holman Bible
B. Chiasm
C. Concatenation (Chains)
D. 3 Speakers, 22 Sections, with Centers
Chapter 1
- the LORD has afflicted her because of the multitude of her transgressions. Her children have gone into captivity
- my affliction
- those whom You commanded not to enter
- He has spread a net for my feet and turned me back;
- the Lord trampled as in a winepress the virgin daughter of Judah.
- because the comforter, who should restore my life, is far from me.
- the LORD has commanded concerning Jacob
- for I have been very rebellious
III. All Her Splendor (Beauty) Has Departed (The Revenge of the Vapor)
IV. Hopelessness and Hope
Conclusion: Forgetting the Lamentable
| Sermon ID | 39121638213 |
| Duration | 53:37 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Lamentations 1 |
| Language | English |
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