Lament themes found in ancient Hebrew literature such as the Book of Psalms represent the deepest cries of agony, anger, confusion, disorientation, sorrow, grief and protest, expressed towards a God who they knew would listen and ultimately respond affirmatively to this emotional outpouring. A scholar on the Hebraic and
5. Pleas for assistance (Menn 1).
For more on the ???Sorrow Songs as Lamentation??? please see barishgolland.googlepages.com/thesorrowsongs2
Bibliography:
Menn, Esther M. ???No Ordinary Lament: Relecture and the Identity of the Distressed in Psalm 22.??? Harvard Theological Review, Oct 2000, v 93, i4, p301.
Allender, Dan. ???The Hidden Hope in Lament.??? Mars Hill Review, Premier Issue:
pgs 25-38, 1994. (www.leaderu.com/marshill/mhr01/lament1.html)
Berlin, Adele. ???
Clark, Edgar Rogie. ???Negro Folk Music in
Smith, Alex. ???Hope and Hopelessness.??? Abstract for Conference on ???Recovering the Language of Lament.??? (www.wfn.org/2002/06/msg00062.html.)
[1] The heading for the Psalm reads, ???For the Director of Music. To the tune of ???The Doe of the Morning.??????
[2] Matthew 27:46. See Menn, pg. 3, for a detailed account of the identity of the ???I??? in this psalm.
[3] Matthew 27:46
[4]Theology Online, ???Lamentations, Introduction.???
[5] Psalm 77 and 88 are examples
[6] See for example Isaiah 16:11 and Jeremiah 48:36, where different instruments are said to be used during performances of laments. Jeremiah???s composed laments were taken up by singers (2 Chronicles 35:25).
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