TEARS Lamentations banner.jpg

TEARS

How?! It seems like disaster all around us. People acknowledge God but don’t obey and honor Him. God’s word is twisted and distorted. We are dealing with the aftermath of personal and corporate rebellion. We weep. Who are we to trust? Where do we place our hope? We learn hope and trust through Lamentations our TEARS to Yahweh who saves and His new mercies each day. #Lamentations\#2024

Starter

Pray

Lord as we wrap up our study of Lamentations may we REMEMBER that You RESTORE, RETURN, and RENEW. Help us to learn to lament through TEARS as we TURN to You, EXPRESS our complaints and questions, ASK boldly without pride or demands, REST in Your character, and SURRENDER to Your eternal promises. Because of Your faithful love we do not perish, for Your mercies never end. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness! We say: The Lord is our portion, therefore let us put our hope in You. Amen

Study Questions

“REMEMBER, RESTORE, RETURN, RENEW”

Well over 1/3 of the Psalms, which are the hymnal of the Old Testament, are lament. Lament is all over the scriptures. There is a pattern to biblical lament. It is displayed in the reality of the biblical story from Genesis to Revelation. The Hebrew title of the book of Lamentations is “How?!” The greek title of Lamentations means “to cry out or shed tears”. “Every human being has the same opening story. Life begins with tears. It’s simply a part of what it means to be human—to cry is human, but to lament is uniquely Christian.” (*Mark Vroegop)*

The prophet Jeremiah wrote Lamentations from his experience of choosing to be under the siege of King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon in Jerusalem with God’s people. Judah had been destroyed because of their sin and rebellion. In Jerusalem, the people died of starvation, disease, and war as a result. God’s people and the nations around them had ignored the warnings of scripture and God’s prophets for hundreds of years. Jeremiah had spent 40 years warning the people and telling them that because of their sin and rebellion they were going to need to surrender to Babylon for 70 years (1 year for every year of Jubilee they did not celebrate since entering the promised land), and then God would send for them to return. God fulfilled that promise under Ezra and Nehemiah.

Each chapter uses the Hebrew alphabet as an acrostic. Like our A, B, C’s, it would be easier to remember by doing it that way. These lamentations are a picture of where believers find themselves today. We are a sinful and suffering people who are captives in a foreign and decaying land. We wait for the return of our King Yahweh who saves (Jesus). He will bring the new earth and new Jerusalem just as He promised for those who follow Him.

READ Lamentations 3:18, 21-24

  1. The turning point in the book of Lamentations is the section we just read. How does this section point us to Chapter 5 saying REMEMBER, RESTORE, RETURN, RENEW?

READ Lamentations 5:1-3, Hebrews 10:32-36

  1. How is what Jeremiah asks God to remember and what the author of Hebrews says to remember similar and/or different?
  2. Discuss other times we see in scripture where people are “enlightened” and that directly leads to them “enduring hard struggle with sufferings” with “confidence”. Why do we tend to forget those stories?
  3. After hundreds of years of God’s warning, because of their sin and rebellion to God’s covenant, God has Jeremiah prophesy that remaining Israelites would be captives in Babylon for 70 years. (Jeremiah 25:11-12; 29:10) “When 70 years for Babylon are complete,” God and His people would REMEMBER, RESTORE, RETURN, and RENEW.
    1. How is this a very similar message to all believers under the new covenant (Hebrews 8:6-13) brought by Jesus?
    2. Why is it just as hard for us to surrender toady as it was for them?

READ Lamentations 5:1-21

  1. Why is it important as God’s people to remember, like God has Jeremiah write in these verses, how bad things were and are?