New Mercies I See?

How do you respond to someone who has brought hardship and affliction upon you in every way imaginable?  What if that “someone” is God?

The book of Lamentations is Jeremiah’s response at seeing the hand of God afflict him, and the nation, with intense hardship and suffering.  At times, the book reads like it was written by multiple authors — or at least an author with multiple personalities.  The third chapter is a good example of that.  The actions of God that Jeremiah describes does not prepare you for the reaction of Jeremiah to God that we read.  Think about how you and I would likely respond to even this partial list of what Jeremiah says the Lord is doing to him.

He says the Lord has:

driven me away.
turned his hand against me.
made my skin and flesh grow old.
broken my bones.
besieged me with bitterness and hardship.
made me dwell in darkness, like those long dead.
walled me in.
weighed me down with chains.
shut out my prayers.
barred my way.
made my paths crooked.
dragged me from the path and mangled me.
made me the target for his arrows.
pierced my heart.
filled me with bitter herbs.
broken my teeth.
trampled me in the dust.
deprived me of peace.

Okay, discouraged yet?  Jeremiah sure was.  He says in verse 20, “I well remember them, and my soul is downcast within me.”  Sounds like he is getting ready to unload.  The unloading that we might do.  Ready to interact with God and let Him know what you think of this kind of treatment.  I think it is my knowledge of my own nature that makes the next few verses come at me so unexpectedly.  In the midst of all this affliction and discouragement, Jeremiah brings something to his mind that gives him hope.  Hope in the midst of that list?  A list he describes as being brought about by “the rod of the Lord’s wrath”.  Is it even possible?  If something can bring hope to that situation, could there be anything that is truly hopeless? 

And so it is with great eagerness to learn the secret of such hope that we read Lamentations 3:22-23, “Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail.  They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.”  The old hymn, “Great Is Thy Faithfulness”, takes inspiration from these verses as the songwriter concludes, “morning by morning new mercies I see.”  Look back at the list above.  His compassions never fail?  New mercies I see?  What planet are they from?  If that list is compassion and mercy, I’m not sure I want any.  But wait.  Compassion and mercy compared to what?  Compared to my image of what a perfect life ought to be and what I think I deserve or compared to God’s knowledge of what I really deserve? 

It is out of a relationship with God that Jeremiah can list the experience of the wrath of God and still say that “because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed.”  While the list mentioned sounds harsh, even brutal at times, it stops short of being the “all-consuming” fire that our God has the right to be.  His mercy, His compassion, says that He will disipline those that He loves, but we will not be destroyed if our trust is in Him to save us.  His faithfulness is great because of His great love. 

In the midst of whatever we experience that feels like the harshness of God’s wrath, we must bring to mind that it is God’s great love that keeps us from being completely consumed.  He is faithful to show His compassion and mercy.  May you and I turn to God when we suffer and thank Him for new mercies we see each day because we are not destroyed as we deserve.