Page:05.BCOT.KD.PropheticalBooks.A.vol.5.GreaterProphets.djvu/1880

 in so far as He has become the substitute of all men, and suffered for their sins." This display of all these references is sadly deficient in logical arrangement; but it contains a precious kernel of biblical truth, which the Evangelical Church has endeavoured in many ways to turn to advantage. Regarding the adaptations of the Lamentations made for liturgical use in the Evangelical Church, see particulars in Schöberlein, Schatz des liturgischen Chor-und Gemeindegesanges, ii. S. 444ff. As to the commentaries on the Lamentations, see Keil's Manual of Introduction to the Old Testament, vol. i. p. 508 Clark's Foreign Theol. Library. To the list of works therein given are to be appended, as later productions, Ewald's recent treatment of the book in the third edition of the Dichter des A. Bundes (1866), i. 2, where the Lamentations have been inserted among the Psalms, S. 321ff.; Wilh. Engelhardt, ''die Klagel. Jerem. übersetzt''. 1867; Ernst Gerlach, ''die Klagel. erkl''. 1868; and Nägelsbach, in Lange's series of commentaries (Clark's English edition), 1868. Sorrow and Wailing over the Fall of Jerusalem and Judah   1  Alas! how she sits alone, the city that was full of people! She has become like a widow, that was great among the nations;