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Hope is realized when the next generation of exiles in Babylonia receive God’s mercy and are brought back to the promised land, Palestine, in a second exodus, a journey not unlike what the Israelites experienced as they left Egypt under Moses’ leadership.

God surely causes grief and torment, but He also provides kindness that originates from His heart of compassion. The discipline administered by the heavenly Father hurts, but the pain is not lasting and actually reflects His compassion. When the Lord sends affliction, it is instructive, restorative, and temporary. Affliction and judgment may sometimes come from the Almighty, but what always springs from the heart of God is a deep and eternal mercy for His people.

34 Left as captives of the land
    to be stomped on and crushed,
35 Legal action and human rights denied
    in the very presence of our exalted God,
36 Lord, surely You do not approve it—they deny
    one person’s rights and a fair trial.

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34 To crush under one’s feet
All the prisoners of the earth,
35 To turn aside the justice due a man
Before the face of the Most High,
36 Or subvert a man in his cause—
(A)The Lord does not approve.

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34 To crush underfoot
    all (A)the prisoners of the earth,
35 (B)to deny a man justice
    in the presence of the Most High,
36 to subvert a man in his lawsuit,
    (C)the Lord does not approve.

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