Daily Bible Reading Wednesday 31st December 2025
by William Moody
Lamentations 5
Restore Us to Yourself, O Lord
5:1 Remember, O LORD, what has befallen us;
look, and see our disgrace!
2 Our inheritance has been turned over to strangers,
our homes to foreigners.
3 We have become orphans, fatherless;
our mothers are like widows.
4 We must pay for the water we drink;
the wood we get must be bought.
5 Our pursuers are at our necks;
we are weary; we are given no rest.
6 We have given the hand to Egypt, and to Assyria,
to get bread enough.
7 Our fathers sinned, and are no more;
and we bear their iniquities.
8 Slaves rule over us;
there is none to deliver us from their hand.
9 We get our bread at the peril of our lives,
because of the sword in the wilderness.
10 Our skin is hot as an oven
with the burning heat of famine.
11 Women are raped in Zion,
young women in the towns of Judah.
12 Princes are hung up by their hands;
no respect is shown to the elders.
13 Young men are compelled to grind at the mill,
and boys stagger under loads of wood.
14 The old men have left the city gate,
the young men their music.
15 The joy of our hearts has ceased;
our dancing has been turned to mourning.
16 The crown has fallen from our head;
woe to us, for we have sinned!
17 For this our heart has become sick,
for these things our eyes have grown dim,
18 for Mount Zion which lies desolate;
jackals prowl over it.
19 But you, O LORD, reign forever;
your throne endures to all generations.
20 Why do you forget us forever,
why do you forsake us for so many days?
21 Restore us to yourself, O LORD, that we may be restored!
Renew our days as of old—
22 unless you have utterly rejected us,
and you remain exceedingly angry with us.(ESV)
This final chapter is a passionate prayer for the Lord to intervene and to restore His suffering people who are in exile. The prayer gives us a window to see what the people had experienced and were continuing to experience.
Their land and their homes had either been destroyed or handed over to strangers (v2). They are like a nation of orphans, widows and the fatherless (v3). Not just individuals but families have been devastated.
In exile even basics like water and sticks have to be bought (v4). They are treated badly and have become so weary (v5). They have surrendered to other nations for to receive bread to live (v6). In captivity slaves rule over them and are in higher position than they are (v8). They are in danger (v9), their skin burnt (v10), women have been raped (v11) and their leaders suffer terribly and are not respected (v12).
The list of hardships go on so that they no longer have joy in their hearts or a dance in their feet (v15). They acknowledge that what has happened has been due to their fathers’ and their sin (v7,16).
They know they deserve no goodness or mercy from the Lord, but they continue to turn to the Lord and seek His mercy and grace (v20-22). They know they have nowhere else to turn to, their only hope is in the Lord. They look at the situation of desolation at Mount Zion (v19), but they look to the heavenly Mount Zion, to heaven itself, where the Lord continues to reign and will reign forever (v20). No Egyptian, or Assyrian, or Babylonian is going to remove the Lord from His throne. Here is where hope alone is found, in seeking the grace and mercy of this eternal King. This is where we all need to turn to.
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