1. Lamentations 2:1–22 (NEG79)
  2. Structure et plan

The overarching theme and outline of Lamentations 2

Lamentations 2:1–22 (NEG79)

1 Eh quoi! le Seigneur, dans sa colère, a couvert de nuages la fille de Sion! Il a précipité du ciel sur la terre la magnificence d'Israël! Il ne s'est pas souvenu de son marchepied, Au jour de sa colère!

The chapter can be divided into two main parts:

PART 1 (Lamentations 2:1–10)

These verses focus on the fact that God is acting against his own people in his anger.

PART 2 (Lamentations 2:11–22)

Theses verses focus on the results of God's judgment over the people, particularly the children.

The first part (Lamentations 2:1–10) is a description of Jerusalem's downfall by God. In the second part (Lamentations 2:11–22) we first find a painful complaint (Lamentations 2:11–17) and then a commentary about it (Lamentations 2:18–19), which then culminates in an admonition to the city to pray to God (Lamentations 2:20–22).1 The acknowledgement that it was the Lord who sent judgment, and that He alone can give comfort, is to be followed by Jerusalem calling on him with her complaint.2

A three-part outline can complement the two-part outline:

PART 1 (Lamentations 2:1–10)

Lamentations 2:1–3 The Lord's Unrestrained Anger

Lamentations 2:4–5 The Lord's Hostility

Lamentations 2:6–7 The Destruction of the Temple

Lamentations 2:8–10 The Destruction of Zion and Its People

PART 2 (Lamentations 2:11–17)

Lamentations 2:11–12 The Heart-Wrenching Tragedy

Lamentations 2:13–17 Probing the Extent of Zion's Calamity

PART 3 (Lamentations 2:18–22)

Lamentations 2:18–22 Zion's Plea

This outline follows the changes of speaker:

The first part (Lamentations 2:1–10) starts with a third-person description of the Lord’s punishment. The Lord has shown no restraint in the outpouring of his wrath (Lamentations 2:1–3), he has acted like an enemy (Lamentations 2:4–5), even though he had to destroy the holy institutions (Lamentations 2:6–7) and caused devastation and misery to the city (Lamentations 2:8–10).

In the second part (Lamentations 2:11–17) there is a change to the first person. The writer now describes his personal reaction to what he has witnessed (Lamentations 2:11–12), and then addresses the city itself (Lamentations 2:12–17), seeking some way in which comfort may be extended to it. The only source of comfort and compensation is the Lord himself.

In the third part there is a direct address and plea to Zion to remind God of her agony (Lamentations 2:18–19), and then follows a prayer in which he told her what to pray (Lamentations 2:20–22). As already stated, the concern for the suffering of the young in the city is evident in the last two parts of the lament (Lamentations 2:11–22).3