Lamentations
March 22, 2026
Teacher: Pastor Leanne Benton
Summary of “Your Kingdom Come: From Lament to Participation”
(Based on “Lamentations March 22 2026 Final.docx” by Leanne Benton)
The sermon reflects on Lamentations 5 as the closing message in a series on lament, showing how honest grief becomes a pathway to restoration and renewed participation in God’s kingdom.
1. Context of Lamentations
Jeremiah writes after Jerusalem’s destruction in 586 BC. The temple is burned, leaders killed, families exiled, and the monarchy ended. The chapter outlines a progression of losses—inheritance, leadership, dignity, joy, and spiritual strength.
2. Honest Grief Is the Beginning of Restoration
Israel begins their prayer with raw honesty: “Remember, Lord, what has happened to us.”
They recount their losses: land, family security, dignity, joy, and the desolation of Mount Zion.
Lament is described as an act of faith—standing between painful reality and God’s promises.
3. God Still Reigns
In the center of the complaint rises a theological anchor:
“You, Lord, reign forever.”
Empires fall and temples crumble, but God's throne is immovable.
This echoes Psalm 48 and shifts the focus from devastation to divine sovereignty—lament begins turning into hope when we move our eyes from what we see to who God is.
4. Participating in God’s Restoration
The people pray:
“Restore us to yourself… renew our days as of old.”
The sermon emphasizes that restoration starts with returning to God—not rebuilding walls.
Lament leads to acknowledgment of sin, repentance, and a desire for renewal.
A proverb captures the shift from lament to participation: “Pray… and move your feet.”
Believers become agents of justice, hope, and worship as they join God’s restoring work.
5. Surrendered Suffering Softens the Heart
Suffering can either harden or soften a heart.
When surrendered to God, suffering produces perseverance, character, and hope (Romans 5), and matures faith (James 1).
Jesus reminds His followers that trouble is inevitable, but peace is found in Him (John 16).
The sermon underscores that how a person responds to pain determines whether they become bitter or grow deeper in faith.
6. Hope Grows in the Soil of Lament
The sermon highlights the spiritual mystery that when someone grieves without becoming cynical or closed-hearted, hope takes root.
A heart that stays open in seasons of loss becomes softer, more compassionate, and more spacious.
This becomes the very place where hope grows and where a transformative “pivot” in one’s story often occurs.
7. The Larger Biblical Arc
Lamentations ends without closure, offering instead a plea for restoration.
But Israel’s story continues—decades later, the exiles return under Cyrus, the temple is rebuilt, and hope rises again.
The sermon emphasizes that lament is not the end but a doorway through which God’s kingdom enters.
8. Final Invitation
The message ends with a reflective invitation:
Some listeners are in seasons of loss and are reminded that God welcomes their lament.
Others have come through seasons of pain and now carry softer, more compassionate hearts; they are encouraged to move toward others in need.
A closing prayer asks God to meet His people “on the pile of rubble,” helping them grieve honestly, surrender fully, trust deeply, and step into renewed hope and participation in His kingdom.