Matthew Poole Commentary - Lamentations 1:22 - 1:22

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Matthew Poole Commentary - Lamentations 1:22 - 1:22


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This verse is another prophetical curse or imprecation, several of which we meet with in holy writ, Psa_109:6-9 137:8 Jer_11:20 18:23, and in many other texts; which would incline us to think that our Saviour’s precept, Mat_5:44, to pray for those that persecute us, backed by his own example, Luk_23:34, and Stephen’s; Act_7:60, is either to be interpreted of praying for the forgiveness of their sins, (we ought to desire the eternal condemnation of none,) or to be restrained to such as are our personal enemies, not the common enemies of the church of God. Our Saviour’s precept most certainly is not to be so interpreted, but that we may lawfully pray for such evils to the implacable enemies of the church and people of God, as may restrain and weaken their hands, and put them out of a capacity of wasting the Lord’s heritage: we are only obliged by it to wish well to their souls, and to desire no evil against them out of private revenge or malice, but only out of love to God, and zeal for his glory; but for their outward prosperity in their courses of enmity we ought no more to pray than against their eternal salvation; for this were to beg of God to encourage his enemies in their enmity against him. And though Jeremiah were a greater prophet than any of us can pretend to be, and had revelations of particular future contingencies which we have not; yet every one may prophesy a ruin to the enemies of God’s church and people, and such as rejoice in their ruin; God never using a rod against his people which he doth not at last burn, nor ever countenacing inhumanity in any, but much less when it is rooted in a malice against himself, and his interest in the world.