Lamentations is seldom used...
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Lamentations is seldom used in any Lectionary except during Holy Week. This section falls in the Good Friday readings, for some Christian churches, and on the anniversary of the 586 B.C. destruction of the temple, in Judaism. The collection of five poems is, as one would suspect, mournful; but also contains a note of trust and hope in God, as we see in today's reading.
The reading is to compliment the Gospel, with the note of hope (v. 22, TEV) "God's unfailing love and mercy," and (v. 26, TEV) "Wait in patience for God." Verse 27 even speaks of learning patience in our youth (the daughter of Jairus is a young girl); and verses 31 and 32 speak of the Lord's mercy and sure and strong love.
Jesus said anyone who harms a youth would be better drowned with a weight on him. Surely we see the message of hope and trust in Divine intervention in this lovely poem of lament; so may we learn from the past and have faith in the present and when misfortune strikes.
- Smith