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A46816 Annotations upon the whole book of Isaiah wherein first, all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity : secondly, in many clauses those things are discovered which are needful and useful to be known, and not so easily at the first reading observed : and thirdly, many places that might at first seem to contradict one another are reconciled : intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to read some part of the Bible ... / by Arthur Jackson. Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1682 (1682) Wing J66; ESTC R26071 718,966 616

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Babylon for this indeed I conceive is primarily here intended as being most agreeable with the Context But yet some extend the Promises here made to that Holy Seed that would rise up to his Church in the Days of the Gospel Ver. 15. And ye shall leave your Name for a curse unto my chosen c. As if he had said You now Glory in the name of being the Seed of Abraham that holy People of God but alas hereafter you shall find it quite contrary Or whereas you hope to leave a Name of great renown behind you instead hereof when you are gone ye shall leave your Name for a curse So that when men shall curse any body they shall instance in you saying Mayest thou be cursed as the wicked Jews were cursed that were carried Captives to Babylon according to that which is said Jer. 29.22 And of them shall be taken up a curse by all the Captivity of Judah which are in Babylon saying The Lord make thee like Zedekiah and like Ahab whom the King of Babylon rosted in the Fire But see also the Notes Chap. 43.28 and Numb 5.21 For the Lord God shall slay thee as was said before ver 12. and call his Servants by another name that is say some not Jews but Christians But I rather think that hereby is meant either 1. That he would take other Nations to be his People Or 2. That Men should not use their name in cursing as they did the Jews but rather in blessing Or 3. That they should be brought into a Glorious state and condition see the Note Chap. 62.4 Ver. 16. That he who blesseth himself in the Earth c. This is mentioned as the effect of that bliss and joy which in the three foregoing verses God had promised his People to wit that hereupon it should come to pass That he who blesseth himself in the Earth shall bless himself in the God of Truth that is the true God or the faithful God Some understand this thus that he who judgeth himself to be in a blessed and happy Estate and that comforts himself with hope that he is in such an Estate shall ascribe it wholly to God and to his Promises of Grace But rather the meaning is that whosoever shall wish or pray for any blessing upon himself shall wish it of God or pray to the true God for it And though by those words in the Earth may be meant in the Land of Judea and so the intent of the words may be that after that in that Land no Man should bless himself in any other but the true God yet rather it is meant of the whole Earth in general as having respect to the Days of the Gospel to wit that all the World over Men should only bless themselves in the true God And he that sweareth in the Earth shall swear by the God of Truth to wit only and not by any Idol God and see the Note also Chap 19.18 Because the former troubles are forgotten that is because God shall put an end to all his Peoples former troubles or because he shall bring them to such a happy Estate that this shall make them forget all their former Miseries see the Note Chap. 54 4. and because they are hid from mine Eyes to wit because I shall quite take them away as not being able any longer to see my Children in such Misery The inference is this That because they should so plainly see that it was God that had made such a blessed change in their Estate therefore they should own and Worship no other God but him But yet withal we must know that this which is said of the troubles of his People being forgotten and hid from Gods Eyes may be understood also in a Gospel-sense of their being freed from all the Miseries their Sins had deserved partly by a full Pardon of their Sins through Faith in Christ here and compleatly by a perfect Freedom from all evil in Heaven hereafter Ver. 17. For behold I create new Heavens and a new Earth c. See the Note Chap. 51.16 It is as if he had said I am about to make such a wonderful Change in my Church that it shall seem to be as if there were a new World created This was begun at the Deliverance of the Jews out of Babylon A wonderful Change was then made when those that were a little before in such miserable Bondage in Babylon were setled again in their own Land and had rebuilt the City Jerusalem and their Temple therein It might be well then said that God had then created new Heavens and a new Earth The Heavens were not Cloudy and frowning as before but clear and fair the Earth was not Barren and Desart as before but Fruitful and well Inhabited But yet more fully this was done in that far more wonderful Change that was wrought in the World when Christ accomplished the Work of his Peoples Redemption and the Gospel began to be Preached amongst all Nations For then indeed in regard of Doctrine Ordinances Worship and the Gifts and Graces conferred upon Gods People th●re seem'd to be a new face and state of things yea there was an alteration for the better in all things whatsoever according to that of the Apostle 2 Cor. 5.17 Old things are past away behold all things are become new Yea and farther it shall be fulfilled at the Resurection called therefore Acts 3.21 the time of the Restitution of all things See the Note Psal 102.26 As for the following words and the former shall not be remembred nor come into mind either it is meant of former troubles and so is the same with what was said in the foregoing Verse or else rather of former Times or former Mercies the former state of things the former Heaven and Earth to wit that the Spiritual excellency of the Church in Gospel Days should so far exceed that which had been in the time of the Law that those former things should not be once minded or thought on see the Note Chap. 43.18 Ver. 18. But be you glad and rejoice for ever in that which I create c. See the Note Chap. 35.10 For behold I create Jerusalem a rejoycing and her People a joy that is I am about to do that for them which shall yield them matter of abundant joy there shall be nothing in a manner but rejoicing amongst them as it is more fully expressed in the next Verse Ver. 19. And I will rejoice in Jerusalem and joy in my People c. This is added either as the main cause why Gods People were in the foregoing verse pressed to be so exceeding joyful Gods Love and Favour being indeed the main ground of his Peoples joy or else as a farther illustration of the Happiness promised them to wit that it should be so great that not only they should rejoice but even God also should rejoice for it together with them And the voice of weeping shall be no more heard
them a quiet and setled habitation Gen. 17.8 being every where hunted and pursued by their enemies hardly bestead and hungry that is suffering many hard and grievous things being stripped and spoiled of all they enjoyed and ready to starve for want of food And it shall come to pass that when they shall be hungry they shall fret themselves and shall curse their King and their God c. That is being overwhelmed with misery out of extream impatience of spirit and being stricken with a kind of desperate rage and madness they shall not only curse their King as judging him the cause of their calamities in that he had called in the Assyrian or had some way ill managed the business with him and so had provoked him against them but their God also to wit because he had not helped them Some indeed conceive that this last is meant of their false gods whom they should curse when they should by experience find how vainly they had expected help from them But I see not but that it might be meant of the true God and that this is purposely added to set forth the extream height of their wickedness and fury according to what is foretold of those desperate wretches under the Beast Revel 16.10 11. They gnawed their tongues for pain and blasphemed the God of heaven because of their pains But however if we understand it of their Idol-gods very observable is the event of their sin They would not trust in Gods promise but forsook him and placed all their hope in the policy of their King and now the issue is that they come to curse their King and their false gods to whom they with their King had given away the honour of the true God As for the last words and look upward though some would have it imply that being convinced of their former folly in resting upon men they should now begin to look Heavenward for help yet because it is joined so immediately with their cursing of God I cannot think that can be intended And therefore I conceive that either here the Prophet begins to relate the desperateness of their condition in that first they should in vain look upward to God for help for which see the Note 2 Sam. 22.42 and afterwards to as little purpose should look to the earth as it is expressed in the following verse or else rather that this is added the better to set forth the desperate madness of these blaspheming wretches to wit that even with their faces looking Heavenward they should curse God All which most Expositors do understand of that miserable condition whereinto this people were brought in the days of Zedekiah when Jerusalem was taken by the Babylonians 2 King 26.45 c. Ver. 22. And they shall look unto the earth c. They that understand the last words of the foregoing verse and look upward of their looking to Heaven for help do accordingly conceive that here a reason is given why they should at last look Heavenward to wit because on earth there was nothing to be discovered but misery and sorrow But rather the drift of the words is to imply that in the whole land they should find no hope of help and comfort and so if that last Clause in the foregoing verse were to imply that they should in vain look upward to Heaven for help as it is there noted that some hold then these words are added And they shall look unto the earth and behold trouble and darkness to imply that neither in Heaven nor on earth any hope of help should appear so that in their trouble they should be as men in the dark not knowing which way to turn themselves The expressions here used are much like those Chap. 5.30 concerning which see the Note there And to the same purpose are the following words dimness of anguish and so also the last Clause and they shall be driven to darkness for this implies that their misery and their anguish and perplexity of mind in their misery should encrease daily more and more A man driven headlong in the dark must needs fall the more desperately And so the Prophet would imply it should be with them CHAP. IX Vers 1. NEvertheless the dimness shall not be such c. Lest the faithful should be over-pressed with fear and sorrow hearing of such a sad and a black day that was coming upon the land in regard of those grievous miseries and straits that should befall them mentioned in several places of the foregoing Chapter and especially in the last verse where he speaks of the trouble and darkness and dimness of anguish that should come upon them therefore the Prophet doth here add a promise by way of consolation telling them of that which might much allay the bitterness of the calamities which are there threatned Some indeed hold that the promise made to the faithful begins not till the second verse The first verse they conceive it rather inserted by way of aggravating the darkness threatned in the foregoing Chapter Nevertheless the dimness shall not be such as was in her vexation when at the first he lightly afflicted the land of Zebulun c. as if he had said No marvel though it be said that the people shall be in such perplexity as is before described when the calamities there threatned shall come upon them for this affliction when it comes shall darken the land otherwise that is in a far more grievous manner than it was darkened by the invasions of enemies in former times And indeed if the calamities threatned in the foregoing Chapter the dimness here spoken of be understood of the destruction made in the land by the Chaldeans in the days of Zedekiah when the City Jerusalem was taken and the Temple burnt and the people were carried captives into Babylon that was in it self a blacker day of distress than ever had been seen in the land of Israel when the Assyrians had made the saddest havock amongst them Well but yet because this expression the dimness shall not be such as was in her vexation seems in an ordinary way of speaking to import that it should not be so great and especially because the following verse seems plainly to be added as a farther explanation of that which is said here The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light c. therefore I rather conceive that the drift of this verse also is to mitigate their fears by assuring them that though the judgments threatned in the foregoing Chapter should fall very heavy upon the land of Israel or Judah yet in some respect it should not be such that is so great as it was in those vexations of the land of Israel by the Assyrians mentioned in the latter part of the verse And accordingly I understand the words thus Nevertheless the dimness to wit that threatned in the foregoing Chapter whether we understand thereby the calamities they underwent in the days of Hezekiah by Sennacheribs
chambers that is betake your selves in your fears to the Chambers of my providence and protection to wit by a serious Meditation of Gods promises and his all-sufficiency goodness and faithfulness by renewing your Repentance by fervent prayer and trusting in him and hoping for deliverance from him for these are the secret hiding places under which Gods people may in times of danger and fear with much peace and quiet of spirit shelter themselves and patiently repose themselves and wait for the Salvation of God See the Notes Job 29.4 Psal 27.5 and 31.20 and 91.1 2. and Pro. 91.10 There seems to be an Allusion in the words to mens keeping within doors in times of stormy weather or to their fleeing to their houses and retiring there to the secretest and securest places they have and shutting the doors upon themselves in times of peril and dread Or it may be particularly to that charge which was given to the Israelites Exod. 12.22 not to stir out of the doors of their houses whilst the destroying Angel passed through the land of Egypt And to the same purpose is that which followeth and shut thy doors about thee that is persevere constantly in the use of these holy means for the securing and quieting your selves not admitting any temptation that should disquiet or perplex your spirits hide thy self as it were for a little moment until the indignation be over-past See the Note Chap. 10.25 Ver. 21. For behold the Lord cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity c. As if he had said There is a great storm coming and therefore you had need to hide your selves the Lord shall from heaven appear in his dreadful judgments executing open vengeance upon those that dwell on the earth even as a King comes from his Palace to sit in the Judgment seat for the punishing of Malefactors Some I know hold That it is the Temple that is here called Gods place and so understand the words thus That though for a long time the Lord might seem to sit still in his Sanctuary and not to mind the wickedness of the men of the World yet at last he would come forth and shew himself by punishing them for their sins But I rather understand it of Gods appearing from heaven according to that of the Apostle Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men And because blood-shed especially the shedding of the blood of Gods people is a wickedness most hateful to God and which he doth usually punish most severely therefore is that added the earth also shall disclose her blood and shall no more cover her slain that is God shall then call men to an account and punish them for all the blood they have shed whether openly or in secret which before seemed not to be minded but to be as we use to say quite forgotten CHAP. XXVII VERSE 1. IN that day c. To wit When the Lord shall go forth to punish the Inhabitants of the earth for their wickedness as was said in the last verse of the foregoing Chapter the Lord with his sore and great and strong sword that is by his infinite power used with great severity shall punish Leviathan that is the Whale or Whirlpool see the Notes Job 41.1 and Psal 104.26 the piercing serpent or as it is in the Hebrew the serpent crossing like a bar for the understanding whereof we must know 1. That all Creatures that glide along whether by earth or water with feet or fins are by the Hebrews called Serpents and 2ly That the Whale or Whirlpool is here called a barlike serpent either because it shooteth swiftly from one side of the sea to the other even as a bolt shoots swiftly into the staple or a bar from one side of the door to the other or because by reason of the huge bulk of his body and his mighty strength he seems invincible not to be over-born moved or stirred by any strength of any Creature no more than a gate or door can be moved that is shut up with bars of Brass or Iron And 3ly that this is rendred by our Translators the piercing Serpent either with respect to his swift piercing through the waves of the Sea as is before said or to his devouring or breaking through any thing that stands in his way And so likewise he is called a crooked Serpent because he passeth through the waters wrigling to and fro with winding and crooking motions and the Dragon the better to set forth his strength and terror even Leviathan that crooked serpent and he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea But now the great question is who this Leviathan was that is here threatned Clear it is that this is meant figuratively of some mighty and dreadful Enemy of Gods people But all the difficulty is in determining who this great enemy here intended was Some understand it of the King of Egypt and that the rather because he is elsewhere termed Leviathan See the Notes Psal 74.13 14. and a whale in the Seas Ezek. 32.2 and a Sea-Dragon Ezek. 29.3 The great Dragon that lieth in the midst of his rivers Again some apply it to the King of Assyria and others to the Babylonian Monarch whose Dominions lay upon the great River Euphrates And indeed if we would restrain it to one particular this last seems most probable But I rather think that it is to be understood generally and collectively of all cruel and mighty Tyrants that are enemies to the Church who for their vast Dominions wherein they rule at their pleasure for their Serpentine subtilty their crooked irregular ways and savage cruelty in devouring and destroying men are compared to these huge Sea-Monsters Yea considering that the Prophet seems here to look beyond the deliverance of the Jews out of Babylon by the Medes and Persians destroying that Empire even to that greater deliverance of Gods People by Christ whereof the other was but a type I see not why the Devil may not be also mainly hereby intended as he makes use of wicked Tyrants as his instruments with respect whereto the expression is used by the Apostle The God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly Rom. 16.20 who for his great power and subtilty and his Dominion over the wicked all the world over may well be termed a Leviathan the piercing Serpent and the Dragon as he is called Rev. 12.9 and the crooked Serpent because he winds and turns himself so many ways to deceive and destroy men And taking the words thus it is in effect all one as if it had been said That Christ should destroy the Devil and his Kingdom with all his instruments Ver. 2. In that day sing ye unto her c. That is when God hath destroyed his peoples mighty enemies as was said in the foregoing verse then shall ye with much joy sing this following song concerning the Church
is also added by way of derision for was it not most absurd to rob the true God of his Glory by that which from him received both its being and growth Ver. 15. Then shall it be for a man to burn c. That is when it is thus grown up then it is hewen down to be fuel for the fire for he will take thereof that is of the trees so hewen down or of the chips he cuts off from the Timber and warmeth himself yea he kindleth it and baketh bread yea he maketh a God and worshippeth it c. that is Some part of it he useth for Kitching-service both in the Oven and Chimney and of the other part of it he maketh a god Ver. 16. He burneth part thereof in the fire with part thereof he eateth flesh c. That is say some With part thereof he maketh Tables and Trenchers whereon to eat his meat or rather with part thereof he dresseth his meat for all along he seems only to speak how it was used as fuel for the fire Ver. 17. And the residue thereof he maketh a god even his graven Image he falleth down to it and worshippeth it c. That is He doth not only provide this Idol for the use of others but he himself also worships it and prayeth unto it and saith Deliver me for thou art my God which is so set forth to imply That men cannot worship and pray to an Idol but they own it for their God Ver. 18. They have not known nor understood c. See the Notes Chap. 27.18 and Psal 14.1 for he hath shut their eyes that they cannot see c. that is God hath justly for their sins punished them with judicial blindness Ver. 20. He feedeth of ashes c. That is The Idolater doth as miserably deceive himself as he should do that thinks to slake his hunger and nourish himself with eating ashes for as ashes eaten would be so far from doing men any good in these regards that it would rather hurt them so it is with the Idolater he sets his heart upon that he delights himself and trusts in that and so feeds himself with hopes of Benefit and Comfort from that which will no way profit him but rather do him a great deal of Mischief namely his Idols pieces of wood that shall one day be turned into ashes as well as the rest of the trees of which they are made and therefore no way likely to help them in their straits but rather to draw the wrath of God upon them It is an Expression much like to that Hos 12.1 Ephraim feedeth on wind implying That the Idolater feeds himself with the vain deceits of his own heart a deceived heart hath turned him aside to wit out of the way of truth that he cannot deliver his soul that is He cannot wind himself out of this foolish Error and so save himself from that Vengeance and Damnation which this his Idolatry and Superstition is like to bring upon him nor say Is there not a lie in my right hand that is Is not this Idol which I am forming or which I hold in my right hand an Error and Deceit a meer Fiction no such thing as I have falsely conceited it to be Do I not see and feel and find it to be so Ver. 21. Remember these O Jacob and Israel for thou art my servant c. See the Note Chap. 41.9 Remember these Idolaters of whom I have spoken to wit their gross sottishness or these things which I have now said against them and the Vanity of their Idolatry And that which is intended is That God would have them think seriously of these things that so when they came to dwell long as Captives in Babylon they might not be intangled with their Idolatry I have formed thee thou art my servant which is repeated again to intimate that Idolatry would be worse in them than in the Gentiles because they were his peculiar people and had been trai●ed up in the Knowledg of his written Law But see also the Notes Chap. 43.1 21. Ver. 22. I have blotted out as a thick cloud thy transgressions and as a cloud thy sins c. That is As a cloud that darkens and hides the Heavens from us and seems to threaten some great storm is many times quite dispersed by the Sun or driven away by the Winds so have I by a free and a full pardon perfectly put away all your sins that have separated beteewn you and your God and have hid his face from you Chap. 59.2 and have thereby cleared 〈◊〉 from all those Terrors and Judgments which your sins might otherwise have brought upon you And doubtless this is mentioned as the foundation of that deliverance which God doth here promise his people their sins the cause of Gods controversie with them being pardoned they might well hope deliverance would come return unto me to wit by Repentance and then fear not for I have redeemed thee and therefore have the best right to thee See the Notes Chap. 43.1 3 4. and Psal 31.5 Ver. 23. Sing O ye heavens c. To set forth how wonderful the work should be of this new Deliverance that is promised to Gods people the Prophet doth here break forth into this Rhetorical invitation of all the Creatures in Heaven and Earth to bless God for it an Expression much like that 1 Chron. 16.31 for which see the Note there Sing O ye heavens for the Lord hath done it to wit that which he had promised the great work of the Redemption of his people and which indeed none but the Lord could do shout ye lower parts of the earth that is say some The Plains and Valleys this being opposed say they to that which follows break forth into singing ye Mountains or rather the earth which lieth below as opposed to the Heavens before mentioned yea the whole Earth even to the very Center for the Lord hath redeemed Jacob which is meant not only of the deliverance of the Jews out of Babylon but also especially of the great work of our Redemption by Christ and glorified himself in Israel to wit by delivering them and destroying their enemies Ver. 24. Thus saith the Lord thy Redeemer c. That is that did formerly deliver thee out of Egypt and will now again deliver thee out of Babylon and he that formed thee from the womb See the Note above ver 2. and 43.1 that stretcheth forth the heavens alone See the Note Psal 104.2 that spreadeth abroad the earth by my self that is without the help or advice of any Ver. 35. That frustrateth the tokens of the liars c. That is Magicians Astrologers and Soothsayers to wit by crossing them in their Predictions whereof they had said That such and such things were sure Signs and Tokens But though this be expressed indefinitely as a thing that God usually doth yet here it is spoken as with reference to what God meant to do amongst
shall be set at Liberty Now though there seems to be an allusion in the Words to the Israelites deliverance out of Egypt concerning whom it is said Exod. 12.33 That the Egyptians were urgent upon the People that they might send them out of the Land in haste yet questionless it is meant in the type of the Captivated Jews in Babylon that the time of their deliverance was coming on apace and in the antitype of Christs delivering his redeemed ones that were in bondage to Satan bound with the Fetters of Sin and Death who should with all readiness embrace the Salvation tendered them in the Gospel And accordingly we must understand the following words and that he should not die in the Pit that is in that Pit of misery whereinto they were fallen or in those Prison-houses wherein they were kept in Babylon Or as it respects Christs ransomed ones that they might not perish for ever in the bottomless Pit of Hell nor that his Bread should fail that is that the poor Captives in Babylon might not perish there for want of necessary provision in their long continued thraldom or in their return homeward by reason of the desart places they were to go through Or as it respects those that are redeemed by Christ that they might be instructed in the mysteries of the Gospel and not want that Spiritual food of their Souls And in this too there may be an allusion to Gods care over the Israelites whom he delivered out of Egypt that they should not want Bread to eat as they travelled through the Wilderness to the Land of Canaan which seems the more probable because of that which followeth in the next Verse Ver. 15. But I am the Lord thy God that divided the Sea c. To wit The red Sea whose Waves roared to wit by reason of the violent blowing of the East Wind wherewith God divided the Waters of the Sea that so the Israelites might pass over on dry ground Exod. 14.21 Ver. 16. And I have put my words in thy Mouth c. Expositors differ much in their Judgments concerning the Person to whom this is spoken That which seems to me most probable is That it is spoken first to Isaiah as the type but then secondly under him to Christ and to all his Prophets and faithful Messengers and Ministers or as some say which is all one in effect to Christ and to his People as the Body of Christ However the drift of the words is clear Namely That this is spoken to comfort his People as before ver 12. by assuring them 1. That the Prophet spake Gods Word to them nothing but what he had enjoined him and in the very words and terms which he had prompted to him and that therefore they had no cause to question the promises that he made them And the like we must hold concerning Christ who often affirmed this that he spake nothing but what God had put into his Mouth see Joh. 3.34 and 8.26.28 And 2dly That God would secure him from all his Enemies and have covered thee in the shadow of mine hand see the Note Chap. 49.2 And then to shew what should be the effect of this the following words are added that I may plant the Heavens and lay the Foundations of the Earth That is That I may hereby create a new World a new Heaven and a new Earth Now we must know that though this may be meant of the Jews deliverance out of Babylon because there was then such a change wrought amongst that People as if they had been brought into a new World and because that is usually ascribed to the Ministry of Gods Prophets which they did only declare and foretell as in that Jer. 1.10 See I have this day set thee over the Nations and over the Kingdoms to root out and to pull down and to destroy and to throw down to build and to plant Yet certainly it is meant principally of that great change and renovation that God by Christ did actually and effectually work in the World at his coming by the Work of his Redemption and the publishing thereof by the preaching of the Gospel by means whereof the curse was taken off from the Creatures which the Sin of Man had brought upon them and all things that were before as it were broken and ruined were restored and settled in Christ and which is chiefly intended a holy Church is gathered and planted throughout the World who are reconciled to God and made new Creatures a People whose Conversation is in Heaven and who are daily fitted for heavenly Glory and say unto Zion Thou art my People That is That God might say to wit by the Prophets Apostles and others by whom it is published and by Christ by whom it was both effected and published ye that were not my People are now become my People Ver. 17. Awake awake stand up O Jerusalem c. Some think that because the Jews were at this time proud and secure and fearless of any Evil that was coming upon them like a drunken Man fallen into a dead sleep by reason of a Spirit of drunkenness and slumber that God had poured forth upon them therefore God by the Prophet doth here awaken them and calls upon them to arise and repent and turn unto the Lord. And indeed expressions much like to these are used by the Apostle in this sense 1 Cor. 15.34 and Eph. 5.14 But by the whole current of the Text it appears that this is spoken by way of comforting them Because they might disregard the promise of deliverance which God had made them by reason of that extremity of misery and oppression under which they lay therefore there is hope here given them that notwithstanding that depth of Calamity whereinto they were fallen yet God would raise them up And accordingly comparing them to a People that by drinking of the Cup of Gods wrath were fallen down and lay in a dead sleep he calls upon them to awaken and arise up Awake awake stand up O Jerusalem as if he had said There will be suddenly a happy change and therefore lye no longer O my People in so sad and disconsolate a condition which hast drunk at the hand of the Lord the Cup of his Fury That is Whom God hath in his just wrath punished with great severity thou hast drunken the dregs of the Cup of trembling and wrung them out that is the whole Cup of Gods indignation even to the very bottom dregs and all which in bitter potions use to be the bitterest and those pressed and squeezed that nothing might be left The meaning is That they had suffered the whole that God had measured out to be their portion or so much that one would think their misery could not be well greater than it was And why this is called a Cup of trembling see the Notes Job 21.20 Psal 11.6 and 60.3 and 75.8 Now this may be conceived to be spoken 1. With respect to
understand it of a mark or sign whereby some Persons may be distinguished from others Namely That when God intended to destroy the Jews he would have a sign or a mark amongst them whereby they should be known whom God had chosen to be rescued and saved from the common destruction that was coming upon that Nation and that herein there is an allusion to the mark of the Blood of the Paschal Lamb upon the Doors of the Israelies in Egypt whereby they were saved from the Sword of the destroying Angel And by this mark or sign might be meant the profession of the Christian Faith or the Word and Sacraments or a Holy Life and Conversation according to the Rule of the Gospel or that inward Seal of Gods Sanctifying Spirit whereby they should be distinguished from counterfeits see Eph. 1.13 and 2 Tim. 2.19 Or rather Gods appointing them to be saved and his watchful providence over them for their preservation which should be as sure a means of safeguarding them from the common destruction as if there had been a sign or mark set upon them for that end and purpose and I will send those that escape of them that is those of the Jews thus preserved unto the Nations to wit to Preach the Gospel to them to Tarshish Pul and Lud that draw the Bow to Tubal and Javan c. for the understanding whereof we must know 1. That by Tarshish may be meant Tarsus in Cilicia or some other remote place or the Ocean Sea in general and so the meaning might be that they should go forth both by Sea and Land to Preach the Gospel And 2. That under the other particular Nations here mentioned whereof it is commonly thought that some lie East and some West and some North and South all other Nations are comprehended all the World over to the Isles a far off that is the Inhabitants of those remote Countries of whom the Jews had little or no knowledge that have not heard my fame neither have seen my Glory that is that had never heard the report of nor seen the glory of God and of his glorious Works see the Note Cap. 52.15 and they shall declare my glory among the Gentiles that is the glorious riches of my Grace in Christ the great things I have done for the Salvation of my People and the destruction of their Enemies Ver. 20. And they shall bring all your Brethren c. The Apostles and other Preachers of the Gospel shall bring in the Converted Gentiles your Brethren as being by Faith made the Children of Abraham for an Offering unto the Lord out of all Nations to wit as a People Consecrate to Gods service according to that of the Apostle Rom. 15.16 that the Offering up of the Gentiles might be acceptable being Sanctified by the Holy Ghost and again Phil. 2.17 If I be Offered upon the Sacrifice and Service of your Faith I joy and rejoyce with you all and Rom. 12.1 Present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable unto God c. The Heathen that were counted an unclean People being now purified by Faith should be tendred to God as a Holy Sacrifice upon Horses and in Chariots and in Litters and upon Mules and upon swift Beasts which implies both 1. That all possible helps and means should be used to bring them in to believe and joyn themselves to the Church 2. That this should be done with much respect and tender care over them see the Note Chap. 49.22 And 3. That hereby the Gospel should be speedily propagated into many Countries to my holy Mountain Jerusalem saith the Lord that is to the Church of Christ see the Notes Chap. 2.2 3. as the Children of Israel bring an Offering in a clean Vessel into the House of the Lord to wit because these converted Gentiles should be a pure and holy People Ver. 21. And I will also take them for Priests and for Levites saith the Lord c. It is as if he had said Yea some of these Gentiles that were counted so unclean that they might not come into the Temple will I take to be Priests and Levites that is Ministers Pastors and Teachers in my Church Ministers and Deacons say some for that it is not that Spiritual Priest-hood common to all Christians see the Note Ch. 61.6 that is hear meant but that peculiar Office of such as were to be Teachers in the Church as the Priests and Levites were Deut. 33.8 is evident because the promise is only that God would take of them that is some of them for Priests and for Levites whereas in the time of the Law none were imployed in those Holy Callings but those that were of the Tribe of Levi then even Men of all Nations should be set apart to these Holy Services Ver. 22. For as the new Heavens and the new Earth which I will make shall remain before me saith the Lord c. And concerning this promise of new Heavens and a new Earth see the Note Chap. 65.17 so shall your Seed and your Name remain the meaning is that as that new state of the Church should continue unto Eternity even after the World should have an end so should the Seed also of the Church consisting both of Jews and Gentiles and consequently their Name also continue for ever There shall never want a Seed of true believers in this Church but they shall continue for ever even as the Bliss or Happiness of their new Estate shall be Ver. 23. And it shall come to pass that from one new Moon unto another and from one Sabbath to another shall all flesh come to worship before me saith the Lord. That is all Nations both Jews and Gentiles see the Note Psal 40.5 It is therefore spoken concerning the days of the Gospel when all legal Festivals were to cease and so the meaning is only that in those days the People of God should constantly attend the Worship and Service of God in their Church-Assemblies as it is said they did Acts 2.42 46. only this is expressed in terms borrowed from the solemn meetings of Gods People under the Law as before Ver. 21. where the Ministers of the Gospel are termed Priests and Levites and so frequently in other places Ver. 24. And they shall go forth c. Having spoken in the foregoing Verses of the great good which God would do for his faithful Servants yea and that unto Eternity here the Prophet returns again to denounce Judgments both Temporal and Eternal against those wicked and ungodly wretches whom he had before theatned Ver. 15 16. and promiseth that his faithful Servants should be Eye-witnesses of it And accordingly I conceive that those Words and they shall go forth and lock upon the Carcases of the Men that have transgressed against me may be meant 1. Of the faithful that should escape being slaughtered in that general havock that was made amongst the Jews by the Chaldeans when they surprized Jerusalem and plundered and burnt both their City and Temple to wit that they should go forth out of Jerusalem being to be carried away Captives and should with their Eyes behold as they went along the Carcases of their Idolatrous Brethren lying in great heaps unburied according to what is before noted upon Chap. 34.3 rotted and so full of of crawling Vermine Worms and Maggots and not fit therefore to be removed and carried away but only to be burnt up with Fire and this I judge the more probable because it is clear that these Idolatrous Jews were those that he had before threatened Ver. 16 17. Or 2. Of the Jews that were sent home by Cyrus to their own Land to wit that they should go out of Babylon and see the Carcases of the Babylonians slain by the Persians lying unburied in such a manner as is before said Or 3. of the Saints and Servants of God in the days of the Gospel brought in from among the Gentiles of whom indeed he had spoken in the foregoing Verses to wit that they having been brought into some straits by their Enemies should after they had recovered their Liberty again go forth and look upon that woful spectacle of the Carcases of their Enemies lying in such a rueful and horrid manner as was before described But now withall we must know that many learned Expositors do understand this very probably I conceive of any notable judgments of God which the Righteous should see executed upon wicked ungodly wretches for their Idolatries profaneness and contempt of the Gospel Only these judgments and executions of divine Vengeance upon wicked Men are figuratively set forth by way of resembling them to that dreadful spectacle of a company of dead Corps that lye rotting and stinking above ground full of crawling Worms and so putrified that there was no touching them they were only fit to be burnt with Fire and yet because of their multitude and putrifaction were like to be very long burning ere they would be consumed And they shall go forth and look upon upon the Carcases of the Men that have transgressed against me for their Worm shal not die neither shall their Fire be quenched And indeed this figurative description of the judgments and vengeance of God upon wicked Men is therefore the fitter 1. Because wicked and ungodly Men void of all Grace and Spiritual Life are no better than the stinking Carcases of Men dead whilst they live 1. Tim. 5.6 Let the dead bury their dead saith our Saviour Math. 8.22 And 2. because a main part of that vengeance which God pours forth upon wicked Men consists in those affrightments and terrours of conscience wherewith they are usually tortured as with a Worm alway gnawing on their Hearts and a Fire alway burning within their bosoms partly here in this World but especially afterwards in Hell to all Eternity for hereto doth our Saviour expresly apply this passage of our Prophet Mark 9.43 44. As for the last Clause and they shall be an abhorring unto all flesh it may be understood both of their being loathed here in this World by all flesh that is all People that should behold the sad discovery of Gods wrath against them in that horrid condition wherein they lay and likewise especially of their being abhorred by all that shall be Eye-witnesses of their extream and unspeakable misery at the day of Judgment FINIS
Gospel when Gods people should be healed of all the wounds and breaches which sin had made in their Souls by that great work of Christs Redemption by the pardon of their Sins and the Sanctifying of their Nature to wit that the glory and joy of the Church then should be sevenfold greater than ever it had been in the days of the Old Testament yea sevenfold greater than the brightness of the Heavenly Lights And indeed because those great deliverances of the Jews before mentioned were types and shadows of this our greater deliverance by Christ there is no question to be made but that this which the Prophet saith here may be justly applied thereto But yet I say primarily and properly it is meant of that great deliverance of the Jews from the Tyranny of the Assyrians Ver. 27. Behold c. Here the Prophet begins more largely to set forth the destruction of the Assyrians in the day of the great slaughter mentioned before ver 25. Behold the name of the Lord cometh from far that is the Lord cometh from Heaven even as we use to say His Majesty is coming when we intend thereby the King himself But why doth the Prophet use this expression I answer that there are Reasons given by Expositors for this that are considerable as 1. That he saith not The Lord cometh but The name of the Lord cometh either 1. by way of slighting the contempt of the Heathen who were wont to deride the Jews for worshipping only the Name of a God an imaginary God whereas they had the Images of the Gods whom they worshipped according to that which one of them said of that people Qui puras nubes coeli Numen adorant as if the Prophet had said even that invisible God of Israel who hath revealed himself to us only by his Name will come and be revenged on you for the wrong ye have done his people Or 2. to imply that he told them of that the report whereof he had heard from a far he had heard glorious things spoken of the coming of the God of Israel against them whose Name was famous and great throughout the world Or 3. to signifie that the Angel by whom the Assyrians should be destroyed should do it in Gods Name and by Commission from God And 2. That he saith Behold the name of the Lord cometh from far to imply that however God had seemed both to his people and to their enemies to stand a far off yet now he would come in suddenly and unexpectedly to the deliverance of his people and to the ruin of their enemies As for the following words burning with his anger and the burden thereof is heavy or as it is the margin and the grievousness of flame the meaning thereof is that the Lord would come against the Assyrians in the heat of great and flaming fury and that this his anger would in the vengeance he would pour upon them prove a heavy and intollerable burden to them upon whom it should light And so in the last words his lips are full of indignation and his tongue as a devouring fire the Lord is set forth after the manner of a man full of wrath whose lips seem to tremble and swell with anger and whose words sound nothing but terror and threatnings And it is well observed by a learned Expositor that the Prophet doth the rather express Gods anger by the words of his mouth to imply that however they despised his word yet his threatnings would have their effect and the sentence that proceeded out of his mouth would be a fire to consume his enemies Ver. 28. And his breath as an over-flowing stream shall reach to the midst of the neck c. That is It shall bring the Assyrians into a dangerous condition as that man is in a stream of water up to the midst of the neck Before Chap. 8.8 it was said of the Assyrian that he should overflow the whole Land and State of Judah even to the neck and here now perhaps in relation thereto it is said the torrent of Gods wrath should overflow the Assyrian even to the midst of the neck to sift the nations to wit those that served in Sennacherib's Army with the sive of vanity that is to distress and trouble them till they were all scattered and cast out and utterly destroyed By a sive of vanity the Prophet seems to intend a sive that lets all things run thorough it till there be nothing left and therefore that which is meant here is that tho the Nations came with the Assyrian in never so great multitudes yet God would turn them off and scatter them like so much chaff till they were brought to nothing And to the same purpose is the next figurative expression also and there shall be a bridle in the jaws of the people causing them to err that is for the remainder of them that are not destroyed by the Angel of the Lord God would carry them away which should be quite contrary to what they designed even as the Rider turns the fiercest Horse with a bit and bridle namely in that instead of going to Jerusalem he would cause them to fly back to their own Country or at least cause them to wander up and down in a scattered manner now one way and then another till they perished And this is just what the Lord by our Prophet said to Hezekiah concerning Sennacherib 2 Kings 19.28 I will put my hook in thy nose and my bridle in thy lips and I will turn thee back by the way by which thou camest Ver. 29. Te shall have a song as in the night when a holy solemnity is kept c. That is when God shall have thus destroyed your enemies as is before said ye shall then sing for joy in a holy manner giving praise and glory to God who hath done this for you even as you are wont to do the night before your solemn festivals to wit those three great festivals when all their males went up to the Temple see the Note Exod. 23.17 the solemnity whereof began always the evening before the festival day and gladness of heart as when one goeth with a pipe to come into the mountains of the Lord to the mighty one of Israel which is said because they that went up to the Temple which stood on Mount Zion from other parts of the land at these solemn feasts used it seems to go along singing and playing upon musical Instruments for joy that they were going to meet with their God in his holy Sanctuary see Psal 42.4 Ver. 30. And the Lord shall cause his glorious voice to be heard c. That is say several learned Expositors The destruction of your enemies shall be such that it shall be as plainly perceived that it is the judgment of God upon them inflicted by his command as if an audible voice had been heard from Heaven enjoyning it to be done and shall shew the lighting down of
possessed themselves of the Land which God had given them and had profaned and trodden down Gods Sanctuary do here beg of God going on in the Prayer begun ver 7. of that Chapter that breaking through all impediments he would suddenly and in great fury and indignation come down and destroy the Enemies of his People and deliver his People out of their hands Oh that thou wouldest rent the Heavens that thou wouldest come down that is that thou wouldest come down rending the Heavens all asunder before thee that the Mountains might flow down at thy presence that is might be melted and so flow away like Water or melted Wax where by melting the Mountains may be figuratively meant the destroying and overturning the Babylonians and other the proud and lofty Enemies of his People and the removing of all impediments out of the way of their return home to their own Country see the Note Psal 97.5 Or else it may be spoken by way of allusion to that which was done at the giving of the Law at Mount Sinai where all being on a light flame in that terrible tempest of Thunder and Lightning the Mountains seemed to tremble and melt away see the Note Judg. 5.4 and so the desire of Gods People here may be that in delivering them now he would shew forth some such sign of his Glorious Majesty and Power as he did at the giving of the Law Some I know do understand this concerning Gods rending the Heavens and coming down of the Incarnation of the Son of God and accordingly by the flowing down of the Mountains they understand either the humbling of the Hearts of proud Sinners by the preaching of the Gospel or else the destroying of all the Enemies of his People But if the first coming of Christ be here intended it is but only as his Redemption was typified by the deliverance of Gods People out of Babylon Ver. 2. As when the melting Fire burneth c. This hath reference to the last words of the foregoing Verse where Gods People desired that at Gods appearing for them the Mountains might flow down and there may be still an allusion to Gods causing the Mountains of Sinai to melt away as is noted before namely that this might be done As when a melting Fire which useth to be most vehement burneth to wit the Wood and Coles which are the Fuel of it or burneth or melteth Mettals by the heat of it and as when the Fire causeth the Waters hanged over it to boile to make thy Name known to thine Adversaries See the Note Chap. 63.12 That the Nations may tremble at thy Presence to wit the Babylonians and other Enemies And hereby now is shewn what was meant in the foregoing Verse by the flowing down of the Mountains at Gods Presence Ver. 3. When thou didst terrible things which we looked not for c. That is which our forefathers did never expect thou wouldest have done for them as being things that seemed when done above all credit and belief and such as humane reason could not comprehend thou camest down the Mountain flowed down at thy Presence as if they had said Thou didst then for them that which we at present desire of thee And now by these terrible things done formerly for their Progenitors are doubtless meant all those stupendious miraculous Works which God wrought for the Israelites from the time that Moses was sent to fetch them out of Egypt until they were possessed of the Land of Canaan and amongst the rest more especially those things which were done at Mount Sinai for which see the Note before ver 1. And the drift of this is to imply that since God had done such great things for them formerly they might hope that he would now do the like again for them when they begged it of him Ver. 4. For since the beginning of the World Men have not heard nor perceived by the Eare neither hath the Eye seen O God besides thee what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him That is None besides thee O God who didst intend and determine before-hand to do them did ever hear or see or was able to reach or comprehend those wonderful things which thou hast prepared for them that trusting in thee do patiently depend and waite upon thee Or else according to the Translation that is in the Margin of our Bibles there was never humane Ear or Eye that ever did hear or see any God besides thee the God of Israel that hath done or prepared to do such things as thou hast prepared for thy People And this is also added to shew that they might well be incouraged to beg that which they had desired of a God that had formerly done such unheard of such unseen and wonderful things for his People Now by these wonderful things which from the beginning of the World Men had never heard nor seen are meant I conceive those terrible things which they looked not for mentioned in the foregoing Verse which God had done for the Israelites in his carrying them out of Egypt into Canaan for which see the Note there and this may seem the more probable because that which the Prophet saith here doth so fully agree with that which Moses had long since said concerning those wonderful works which God did then for the Israelites Deut. 4.32 33 34. For ask now of the days that are past which were before thee since the day that God created Man upon the Earth and ask from the one side of Heaven unto the other whether there hath been any such thing as this great thing is or hath been heard like it c. The Apostle indeed makes use of these words of the Prophet 1. Cor. 2.9 Where speaking of the wisdom revealed in the Gospel he affirms it to be above the reach of Mans understanding Which none saith he of the Princes of this world knew But as it is written Eye hath not seen nor Eare heard neither have entred into the Heart of Man Which Clause is added by the Apostle the better to explain the words of the Prophet the things which God hath prepared for them that love him And by these things some understand the incomprehensible happiness which God hath prepared in Heaven for his Poople but most of the Mysteries revealed in the Gospel which had been formerly hidden even from Gods own People But it is usual with the Pen-men of the New Testament to alledge passages out of the Old only by way of allusion See the like noted Psal 19.4 And besides the words here are so general that they may well comprehend all the incomprehensible Works of God for his People though they might be more particularly intended as is before said of the Wonders formerly wrought in the Deliverance of the Israelites Ver. 5. Thou meetest him that rejoiceth and worketh righteousness c. That is Those that trusting in thee do rejoice in thee and do their Duty Or those that do joyfully and