Lamentations: When God Is SilentExemplo
How
How lonely sits the city that was full of people! (v. 1)
The original Hebrew title for the book of Lamentations is also the book’s first word: How. Lamentations has traditionally been attributed to the prophet Jeremiah—who warned God’s people of the impending exile to Babylon, and then watched as the devastation unfolded. The opening verses of Lamentations reflect Jeremiah’s shock over the disaster. He surveys a once-vibrant city, now deserted.
Sometimes, after a difficult season or devastating loss, our lives feel like that lonely city. We find ourselves searching for words to pray, and the only one that comes is how: “How could God let this happen? How can I go on? How can I continue to trust God? How can any good come of this?”
During the exile, Jeremiah and his people knew God was allowing them to suffer for their transgressions. But they had no way of knowing just how God was using their circumstances for his saving purposes. In their trouble, God felt distant. But God was not silent. Even as he sent them into exile, God promised to sustain them. He went so far as to say that the exile was part of his plan of salvation—for them and their world (see Jer. 29:10-14).
In our troubles, God may seem silent. But God has spoken words of promise to us too—words sealed in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. We may not know how God will rescue us or redeem our current circumstances. But we can trust that he will.
As you pray, ask God to fulfill his promises and his saving purposes.
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In difficult times, do you feel like God is silent? The book of Lamentations offers a language for times when you feel alone in sorrow. Lamentations invites you to pour out your most difficult emotions in prayer and to return to the God who loves you and is working all things together for good. In this five-day series, read through the book of Lamentations and consider God's steadfast love.
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