Lamentations 4:2

2 Zion's precious children, once valued as pure gold— oh no!—now they are worth no more than clay pots made by a potter.

Lamentations 4:2 Meaning and Commentary

Lamentations 4:2

The precious sons of Zion, comparable to fine gold
This explains what is meant in ( Lamentations 4:1 ) ; by gold, fine gold, and stones of the sanctuary; not Josiah and his sons, as some Jewish interpreters; but all the sons of Zion, or children of God; not the inhabitants of Zion literally, but spiritually; see ( Zechariah 9:13 ) ( Psalms 149:2 ) . Zion is the church; her sons are her spiritual seed and offspring that are born of her, she being the mother of them all, and born in her, by means of the word; and brought up by her, through the ordinances, and so are regenerate persons; and these the sons of God: and who are "precious", not in themselves, being of the fallen race of Adam; of the earth, earthly, as he was; of the same mass and lump with the rest of mankind; in no wise better than others, by nature; and have no intrinsic worth and value in them, but what comes by and from the grace of God; nor are they precious in their own esteem, and much less in the esteem of the men of the world; but in the eye of God, and of his son Jesus Christ, and of the blessed Spirit, and in the opinion of other saints; see ( Psalms 16:3 ) ( 116:15 ) ( Isaiah 43:4 ) ; in what sense these are comparable to fine gold, (See Gill on Lamentations 4:1); how are they esteemed as earthen pitchers, the work of the hands of the
potter!
they are indeed earthen vessels with respect to their bodies, frail, weak, and mortal; but they are the work of God's hands, even as creatures, and particularly as new creatures, and are a curious piece of his workmanship, and so valuable, and especially by him, who is as tender and as careful of them as the apple of his eye; and yet these are greatly disesteemed by carnal men, are reckoned as the faith of the world, and the offscouring of all things; as earthen vessels, fit for no use but common or dishonourable ones, or to be broke in pieces, and rendered useless and contemptible: see ( Psalms 31:12 ) .

Lamentations 4:2 In-Context

1 Oh, no! Gold is tarnished; even the purest gold is changed. Sacred jewels are scattered on every street corner.
2 Zion's precious children, once valued as pure gold— oh no!—now they are worth no more than clay pots made by a potter.
3 Even jackals offer the breast; they nurse their young. But the daughter of my people has become cruel, like desert ostriches.
4 The baby's tongue sticks to the roof of its mouth, thirsty. Children ask for bread, beg for it—but there is no bread.
5 Those who once ate gourmet food now tremble in the streets. Those who wore the finest purple clothes now cling to piles of garbage.
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