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Daniel Whedon

Whedon's Commentary on the Bible - Lamentations 3:26

26. Hope and quietly wait, etc. More literally, It is good both to wait and be silent =silently wait. Keil renders it: It is good that he should wait, and in silence too, for the help of God. The point is, that he should not only wait, but abstain from murmurings and repinings. This also prepares for the thought of the following verse, for he who has patiently submitted to sufferings in his youth will not readily sink in despair in old age, but will be likely to exercise himself in a... read more

Daniel Whedon

Whedon's Commentary on the Bible - Lamentations 3:28-30

28-30. He sitteth The verbs commencing these verses are apocopated futures, and should be rendered with a passive sense, as: Let him sit alone and keep silence; Let him put his mouth in the dust; Let him give his cheek, etc. The second clause of Lamentations 3:28 should read: For He (God) hath laid on him the burden. “There is a certain gradation in the three verses that is quite unmistakable. The sitting alone and in silence is comparatively the easiest; it is harder to place the... read more

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