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The author of this literary masterpiece is unknown. Lamentations provides eyewitness testimony of Babylon's destruction of Jerusalem in 586 b.c. in vivid, poetic detail. It was likely written between 586 and 516 b.c., with an early date being more probable.
The key passage in Lamentations is 3:19-24, which affirms that belief in God's mercy and faithfulness is the key to a restored relationship with God. Forgiveness is possible even for people who have deserved God's judgment (1:18). Hope, not despair, is the central theme in Lamentations.
Lamentations was most likely written to be prayed or sung in worship services devoted to asking God's forgiveness. Such services began as early as the months after the temple's destruction in 586 b.c. (Jer. 41:4-5). They continued after the temple was rebuilt during Zechariah's time (c. 520 b.c.; see Zech. 7:3-5; 8:19). In later years, Lamentations was read and sung as part of annual observances marking the temple's destruction.
Lamentations presents many key theological realities from an important era in Israel's history:
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