It is agreed that here begins a new sermon, which is continued to the
end of
Isaiah 24:1-27:13
And in it the prophet, according to the directions he had received,
does, in many precious promises, "say to the righteous, It shall be
well with them;" and, in many dreadful threatenings, he says, "Woe to
the wicked, it shall be ill with them"
(Isaiah 3:10,11);
and these are interwoven, that they may illustrate each other. This
chapter is mostly threatening; and, as the judgments threatened are
very sore and grievous ones, so the people threatened with those
judgments are very many. It is not the burden of any particular city or
kingdom, as those before, but the burden of the whole earth. The word
indeed signifies only the land, because our own land is commonly to us
as all the earth. But it is here explained by another word that is not
so confined; it is the world
(Isaiah 24:4);
so that it must at least take in a whole neighbourhood of nations.
1. Some think (and very probably) that it is a prophecy of the great
havoc that Sennacherib and his Assyrian army should now shortly make of
many of the nations in that part of the world.
2. Others make it to point at the like devastations which, about 100
years afterwards, Nebuchadnezzar and his armies should make in the same
countries, going from one kingdom to another, not only to conquer them,
but to ruin them and lay them waste; for that was the method which
those eastern nations took in their wars. The promises that are mixed
with the threatenings are intended for the support and comfort of the
people of God in those very calamitous times. And, since here are no
particular nations names either by whom or on whom those desolations
should be brought, I see not but it may refer to both these events.
Nay, the scripture has many fulfillings, and we ought to give it its
full latitude; and therefore I incline to think that the prophet, from
those and the like instances which he had a particular eye to, designs
here to represent in general the calamitous state of mankind, and the
many miseries which human life is liable to, especially those that
attend the wars of the nations. Surely the prophets were sent, not
only to foretel particular events, but to form the minds of men to
virtue and piety, and for that end their prophecies were written and
preserved even for our learning, and therefore ought not to be looked
upon as of private interpretation. Now since a thorough conviction of
the vanity of the world, and its insufficiency to make us happy, will
go far towards bringing us to God, and drawing out our affections
towards another world, the prophet here shows what vexation of spirit
we must expect to meet with in these things, that we may never take up
our rest in them, nor promise ourselves satisfaction any where short of
the enjoyment of God. In this chapter we have,
I. A threatening of desolating judgments for sin
(Isaiah 24:1-12),
to which is added an assurance that in the midst of them good people
should be comforted,
Isaiah 24:13-15.
II. A further threatening of the like desolations
(Isaiah 24:16-22),
to which is added an assurance that in the midst of all God should be
glorified.
General Desolation Announced.
B. C. 718.
1 Behold, the LORD maketh the earth empty, and maketh it waste,
and turneth it upside down, and scattereth abroad the inhabitants
thereof.
2 And it shall be, as with the people, so with the priest; as
with the servant, so with his master; as with the maid, so with
her mistress; as with the buyer, so with the seller; as with the
lender, so with the borrower; as with the taker of usury, so with
the giver of usury to him.
3 The land shall be utterly emptied, and utterly spoiled: for
the LORD hath spoken this word.
4 The earth mourneth and fadeth away, the world languisheth
and fadeth away, the haughty people of the earth do languish.
5 The earth also is defiled under the inhabitants thereof;
because they have transgressed the laws, changed the ordinance,
broken the everlasting covenant.
6 Therefore hath the curse devoured the earth, and they that
dwell therein are desolate: therefore the inhabitants of the
earth are burned, and few men left.
7 The new wine mourneth, the vine languisheth, all the
merry-hearted do sigh.
8 The mirth of tabrets ceaseth, the noise of them that rejoice
endeth, the joy of the harp ceaseth.
9 They shall not drink wine with a song; strong drink shall be
bitter to them that drink it.
10 The city of confusion is broken down: every house is shut
up, that no man may come in.
11 There is a crying for wine in the streets; all joy is
darkened, the mirth of the land is gone.
12 In the city is left desolation, and the gate is smitten with
destruction.
It is a very dark and melancholy scene that this prophecy presents to
our view; turn our eyes which way we will, every thing looks dismal.
The threatened desolations are here described in a great variety of
expressions to the same purport, and all aggravating.
I. The earth is stripped of all its ornaments and looks as if it were
taken off its basis; it is made empty and waste
(Isaiah 24:1),
as if it
were reduced to its first chaos, Tohu and Bohu, nothing
but confusion and emptiness again
(Genesis 1:2),
without form and void. It is true earth sometimes signifies the
land, and so the same word eretz is here translated
(Isaiah 24:3):
The land shall be utterly emptied and utterly spoiled; but I see
not why it should not there, as well as
Isaiah 24:1,
be translated the earth; for most commonly, if not always, where
it signifies some one particular land it has something joined to it, or
at least not far from it, which does so appropriate it; as the land (or
earth) of Egypt, or Canaan, or this land, or ours, or yours, or the
like. It might indeed refer to some particular country, and an
ambiguous word might be used to warrant such an application; for it is
good to apply to ourselves, and our own hands, what the scripture says
in general of the vanity and vexation of spirit that attend all things
here below; but it should seem designed to speak what often happens to
many countries, and will do while the world stands, and what may, we
know not how soon, happen to our own, and what is the general character
of all earthly things: they are empty of all solid comfort and
satisfaction; a little thing makes them waste. We often see numerous
families, and plentiful estates, utterly emptied and utterly spoiled,
by one judgment or other, or perhaps only by a gradual and insensible
decay. Sin has turned the earth upside down; the earth has
become quite a different thing to man from what it was when God made it
to be his habitation. Sin has also scattered abroad the inhabitants
thereof. The rebellion at Babel was the occasion of the dispersion
there. How many ways are there in which the inhabitants both of towns
and of private houses are scattered abroad, so that near relations and
old neighbours know nothing of one another! To the same purport is
Isaiah 24:4.
The earth mourns, and fades away; it disappoints those that
placed their happiness in it and raised their expectations high from
it, and proves not what they promised themselves it would be.
The whole world languishes and fades away, as hastening
towards a dissolution. It is, at the best, like a flower, which withers
in the hands of those that please themselves too much with it, and lay
it in their bosoms. And, as the earth itself grows old, so those that
dwell therein are desolate; men carry crazy sickly bodies along with
them, are often solitary, and confined by affliction,
Isaiah 24:6.
When the earth languishes, and is not so fruitful as it used to be,
then those that dwell therein, that make it their home, and rest, and
portion, are desolate; whereas those that by faith dwell in God can
rejoice in him even when the fir-tree does not blossom. If we look
abroad, and see in how many places pestilences and burning fevers rage,
and what multitudes are swept away by them in a little time, so that
sometimes the living scarcely suffice to bury the dead, perhaps we
shall understand what the prophet means when he says, The
inhabitants of the earth are burned, or consumed, some by one
disease, others by another, and there are but few men left, in
comparison. Note, The world we live in is a world of disappointment, a
vale of tears, and a dying world; and the children of men in it are but
of few days, and full of trouble.
II. It is God that brings all these calamities upon the earth. The
Lord that made the earth, and made it fruitful and beautiful, for
the service and comfort of man, now makes it empty and waste
(Isaiah 24:1),
for its Creator is and will be its Judge; he has an incontestable right
to pass sentence upon it and an irresistible power to execute that
sentence. It is the Lord that has spoken this word, and
he will do the work
(Isaiah 24:3);
it is his curse that has devoured the earth
(Isaiah 24:6),
the general curse which sin brought upon the ground for man's
sake
(Genesis 3:17),
and all the particular curses which families and countries bring upon
themselves by their enormous wickedness. See the power of God's curse,
how it makes all empty and lays all waste; those whom he curses are
cursed indeed.
III. Persons of all ranks and conditions shall share in these
calamities
(Isaiah 24:2):
It shall be as with the people, so with the priest, &c. This is
true of many of the common calamities of human life; all are subject to
the same diseases of body, sorrows of mind, afflictions in relations,
and the like. There is one event to those of very different stations;
time and chance happen to them all. It is in a special manner true of
the destroying judgments which God sometimes brings upon sinful
nations; when he pleases he can make them universal, so that none shall
escape them or be exempt from them; whether men have little or much,
they shall lose it all. Those of the meaner rank smart first by famine;
but those of the higher rank go first into captivity, while the poor of
the land are left. It shall be all alike,
1. With high and low: As with the people, so with the priest, or
prince. The dignity of magistrates and ministers, and the respect and
reverence due to both, shall not secure them. The faces of elders
are not honoured,
Lamentations 5:12.
The priests had been as corrupt and wicked as the people; and, if their
character served not to restrain them from sin, how can they expect it
should serve to secure them from judgments? In both it is like
people, like priest,
Hosea 4:8,9.
2. With bond and free: As with the servant, so with his master; as
with the maid, so with her mistress. They have all corrupted their
way, and therefore will all be made miserable when the earth is made
waste.
3. With rich and poor. Those that have money before-hand, that are
purchasing, and letting out money to interest, will fare no better than
those that are so impoverished that they are forced to sell their
estates and take up money at interest. There are judgments short of
the great day of judgment in which rich and poor meet together. Let not
those that are advanced in the world set their inferiors at too great a
distance, because they know not how soon they may be set upon a level
with them. The rich man's wealth is his strong city in his own
conceit; but it does not always prove so.
IV. It is sin that brings these calamities upon the earth. The earth is
made empty, and fades away, because it is defiled under the
inhabitants thereof
(Isaiah 24:5);
it is polluted by the sins of men, and therefore it is made desolate by
the judgments of God. Such is the filthy nature of sin that it defiles
the earth itself under the sinful inhabitants thereof, and it is
rendered unpleasant in the eyes of God and good men. See
Leviticus 18:25,27,28.
Blood, in particular, defiles the land,
Numbers 35:33.
The earth never spues out its inhabitants till they have first defiled
it by their sins. Why, what have they done?
1. They have transgressed the laws of their creation, not answered the
ends of it. The bonds of the law of nature have been broken by them,
and they have cast from them the cords of their obligations to the God
of nature.
2. They have changed the ordinances of revealed religion, those
of them that have had the benefit of that. They have neglected the
ordinances (so some read it), and have made no conscience of
observing them. They have passed over the laws, in the commission of
sin, and have passed by the ordinance, in the omission of duty.
3. Herein they have broken the everlasting covenant, which is a
perpetual bond and will be to those that keep it a perpetual blessing.
It is God's wonderful condescension that he is pleased to deal with men
in a covenant-way, to do them good, and thereby oblige them to do him
service. Even those that had no benefit by God's covenant with Abraham
had benefit by his covenant with Noah and his sons, which is called
an everlasting covenant, his covenant with day and night; but
they observe not the precepts of the sons of Noah, they acknowledge not
God's goodness in the day and night, nor study to make him any grateful
returns, and so break the everlasting covenant and defeat the gracious
designs and intentions of it.
V. These judgments shall humble men's pride and mar their mirth. When
the earth is made empty,
1. It is a great mortification to men's pride
(Isaiah 24:4):
The haughty people of the earth do languish; for they have lost
that which supported their pride, and for which they magnified
themselves. As for those that have held their heads highest, God can
make them hang the head.
2. It is a great damp to men's jollity. This is enlarged upon much
(Isaiah 24:7-9):
All the merry-hearted do sigh. Such is the nature of carnal
mirth, it is but as the crackling of thorns under a pot,
Ecclesiastes 7:6.
Great laughters commonly end in a sigh. Those that make the world their
chief joy cannot rejoice ever more. When God sends his judgments into
the earth he designs thereby to make those serious that were wholly
addicted to their pleasures. Let your laughter be turned into
mourning. When the earth is emptied the noise of those that
rejoice in it ends. Carnal joy is a noisy thing; but the noise of
it will soon be at an end, and the end of it is heaviness. Two things
are made use of to excite and express vain mirth, and the jovial crew
is here deprived of both:--
(1.) Drinking: The new wine mourns; it has grown sour for want
of drinking; for, how proper soever it may be for the heavy heart
(Proverbs 31:6),
it does not relish to them as it does to the merry-hearted. The vine
languishes, and gives little hopes of a vintage, and therefore
the merry-hearted do sigh; for they know no other gladness than
that of their corn, and wine, and oil increasing
(Psalms 4:7),
and, if you destroy their vines and their fig-trees, you make all
their mirth to cease,
Hosea 2:11,12.
They shall not now drink wine with a song and with
huzzas, as they used to, but rather drink it with a sigh; nay,
Strong drink shall be bitter to those that drink it, because
they cannot but mingle their tears with it; or, through sickness, they
have lost the relish of it. God has many ways to embitter wine and
strong drink to those that love them and have the highest gust of them:
distemper of body, anguish of mind, the ruin of the estate or country,
will make the strong drink bitter and all the delights of sense
tasteless and insipid.
(2.) Music: The mirth of tabrets ceases, and the joy of the
harp, which used to be at their feasts,
Isaiah 5:12.
The captives in Babylon hang their harps on the willow trees. In short,
All joy is darkened; there is not a pleasant look to be seen,
nor has any one power to force a smile; all the mirth of the land is
gone
(Isaiah 24:11);
and, if it was that mirth which Solomon calls madness, there is
no great loss of it.
VI. The cities will in a particular manner feel from these desolations
of the country
(Isaiah 24:10):
The city of confusion is broken, is broken down (so we read it);
it lies exposed to invading powers, not only by the breaking down of
its walls, but by the confusion that the inhabitants are in. Every
house is shut up, perhaps by reason of the plague, which has burned
or consumed the inhabitants, so that there are few men left,
Isaiah 24:6.
Houses infected are usually shut up that no man may come in. Or they
are shut up because they are deserted and uninhabited. There is a
crying for wine, that is, for the spoiling of the vintage, so that
there is likely to be no wine. In the city, in Jerusalem itself,
that had been so much frequented, there shall be left nothing but
desolation; grass shall grow in the streets, and the gate is
smitten with destruction
(Isaiah 24:12);
all that used to pass and repass through the gate are smitten, and all
the strength of the city is cut off. How soon can God make a city of
order a city of confusion, and then it will soon be a city of
desolation!
Hope in the End.
B. C. 718.
13 When thus it shall be in the midst of the land among the
people, there shall be as the shaking of an olive tree, and
as the gleaning grapes when the vintage is done.
14 They shall lift up their voice, they shall sing for the
majesty of the LORD, they shall cry aloud from the sea.
15 Wherefore glorify ye the LORD in the fires, even the name
of the LORD God of Israel in the isles of the sea.
Here is mercy remembered in the midst of wrath. In Judah and Jerusalem,
and the neighbouring countries, when they are overrun by the enemy,
Sennacherib or Nebuchadnezzar, there shall be a remnant preserved from
the general ruin, and it shall be a devout and pious remnant. And this
method God usually observes when his judgments are abroad; he does not
make a full end,
Isaiah 6:13.
Or we may take it thus: Though the greatest part of mankind have all
their comfort ruined by the emptying of the earth, and the making of
that desolate, yet there are some few who understand their interests
better, who have laid up their treasure in heaven and not in things
below, and therefore can keep up their comfort and joy in God even
when the earth mourns and fades away. Observe,
I. The small number of this remnant,
Isaiah 24:13.
When all goes to ruin there shall be as the shaking of an
olive-tree, and the gleaning grapes, here and there one who shall
escape the common calamity (as Noah and his family when the old world
was drowned), that shall be able to sit down upon a heap of the ruins
of all their creature comforts, and even then rejoice in the Lord
(Habakkuk 3:16-18),
who, when all faces gather blackness, can lift up their heads with joy,
Luke 21:26,28.
These few are dispersed, and at a distance from each other, like the
gleanings of the olive-tree; and they are concealed, hid under the
leaves. The Lord only knows those that are his; the world does not.
II. The great devotion of this remnant, which is the greater for their
having so narrowly escaped this great destruction
(Isaiah 24:14):
They shall lift up their voice; they shall sing.
1. They shall sing for joy in their deliverance. When the mirth of
carnal worldlings ceases the joy of the saints is as lively as ever;
when the merry-hearted do sigh because the vine languishes the
upright-hearted do sing because the covenant of grace, the fountain of
their comforts and the foundation of their hopes, never fails. Those
that rejoice in the Lord can rejoice in tribulation, and by faith may
be in triumphs when all about them are in tears.
2. They shall sing to the glory and praise of God, shall sing not only
for the mercy but for the majesty of the Lord. Their songs are
awful and serious, and in their spiritual joys they have a reverend
regard to the greatness of God, and keep at a humble distance when they
attend him with their praises. The majesty of the Lord, which is matter
of terror to wicked people, furnishes the saints with songs of praise.
They shall sing for the magnificence, or transcendent excellency, of
the Lord, shown both in his judgments and in his mercies; for we must
sing, and sing unto him, of both,
Psalms 101:1.
Those who have made, or are making, their escape from the land (that
being emptied and made desolate) to the sea and the isles of the sea,
shall thence cry aloud; their dispersion shall help to spread the
knowledge of God, and they shall make even remote shores to ring with
his praises. It is much for the honour of God if those who fear him
rejoice in him, and praise him, even in the most melancholy times.
III. Their holy zeal to excite others to the same devotion
(Isaiah 24:15);
they encourage their fellow-sufferers to do likewise.
1. Those who are in the fires, in the furnace of affliction,
those fires by which the inhabitants of the earth are burned,
Isaiah 24:6.
Or in the valleys, the low, dark, dirty places.
2. Those who are in the isles of the sea, whither they are
banished, or are forced to flee for shelter, and hide themselves remote
from all their friends. They went through fire and water
(Psalms 66:12);
yet in both let them glorify the Lord, and glory him as the Lord God of
Israel. Those who through grace can glory in tribulation ought to
glorify God in tribulation, and give him thanks for their comforts,
which abound as their afflictions do abound. We must in every fire,
even the hottest, in every isle, even the remotest, keep up our good
thoughts of God. When, though he slay us, yet we trust in him--when,
though for his sake we are killed all the day long, yet none of these
things move us--then we glorify the Lord in the fires. Thus the three
children, and the martyrs that sang at the stake.
Encouraging Prospects; Degeneracy Predicted.
B. C. 718.
16 From the uttermost part of the earth have we heard songs,
even glory to the righteous. But I said, My leanness, my
leanness, woe unto me! the treacherous dealers have dealt
treacherously; yea, the treacherous dealers have dealt very
treacherously.
17 Fear, and the pit, and the snare, are upon thee, O
inhabitant of the earth.
18 And it shall come to pass, that he who fleeth from the
noise of the fear shall fall into the pit; and he that cometh up
out of the midst of the pit shall be taken in the snare: for the
windows from on high are open, and the foundations of the earth
do shake.
19 The earth is utterly broken down, the earth is clean
dissolved, the earth is moved exceedingly.
20 The earth shall reel to and fro like a drunkard, and shall
be removed like a cottage; and the transgression thereof shall be
heavy upon it; and it shall fall, and not rise again.
21 And it shall come to pass in that day, that the LORD shall
punish the host of the high ones that are on high, and the
kings of the earth upon the earth.
22 And they shall be gathered together, as prisoners are
gathered in the pit, and shall be shut up in the prison, and
after many days shall they be visited.
23 Then the moon shall be confounded, and the sun ashamed, when
the LORD of hosts shall reign in mount Zion, and in Jerusalem,
and before his ancients gloriously.
These verses, as those before, plainly speak,
I. Comfort to saints. They may be driven, by the common calamities of
the places where they live, into the uttermost parts of the
earth, or perhaps they are forced thither for their religion; but
there they are singing, not sighing. Thence have we heard songs, and it
is a comfort to us to hear them, to hear that good people carry their
religion along with them even to the most distant regions, to hear that
God visits them there and gives encouragement to hope that he will
gather them thence,
Deuteronomy 30:4.
And this is their song, even glory to the righteous: the word is
singular, and may refer to the righteous God, who is just in all
he has brought upon us. This is glorifying the Lord in the fires. Or
the meaning may be, "These songs redound to the glory or beauty of the
righteous that sing them." We do the greatest honour imaginable to
ourselves when we employ ourselves in honouring and glorifying God.
This may have reference to the sending of the gospel to the uttermost
parts of the earth, as far as this island of ours, in the days of the
Messiah, the glad tidings of which are echoed back in songs heard
thence, from churches planted there, even glory to the righteous God,
agreeing with the angels' song, Glory be to God in the highest,
and glory to all righteous men; for the work of redemption was ordained
before the world for our glory.
II. Terror to sinners. The prophet, having comforted himself and others
with the prospect of a saved remnant, returns to lament the miseries he
saw breaking in like a mighty torrent upon the earth: "But I said,
My leanness! my leanness! woe unto me! The very thought of it frets
me, and makes me lean,"
Isaiah 24:16.
He foresees,
1. The prevalency of sin, that iniquity should abound
(Isaiah 24:16):
The treacherous dealers have dealt treacherously; this is itself
a judgment, and that which provokes God to bring other judgments.
(1.) Men are false to one another; there is no faith in man, but a
universal dishonesty. Truth, that sacred bond of society, has departed,
and there is nothing but treachery in men's dealings. See
Jeremiah 9:1,2.
(2.) They are all false to their God; as to him, and their covenant
with him, the children of men are all treacherous dealers, and have
dealt very treacherously with their God, in departing from their
allegiance to him. This is the original, and this the aggravation, of
the sin of the world; and, when men have been false to their God, how
should they be true to any other?
2. The prevalency of wrath and judgment for that sin.
(2.) The inhabitants of the earth will be pursued from time to time,
from place to place, by one mischief or other
(Isaiah 24:17,18):
Fear, and the pit, and the snare (fear of the pit and the snare)
are upon them wherever they are; for the sons of men know not what evil
they may suddenly be snared in,
Ecclesiastes 9:12.
These three words seem to be chosen for the sake of an elegant
paranomasia, or, as we now scornfully call it, a jungle of words:
Pachad, and Pachath, and Pach; but the meaning is
plain
(Isaiah 24:18),
that evil pursues sinners
(Proverbs 13:21),
that the curse shall overtake the disobedient
(Deuteronomy 28:15),
that those who are secure because they have escaped one judgment know
not how soon another may arrest them. What this prophet threatens all
the inhabitants of the earth with another makes part of the judgment of
Moab,
Jeremiah 48:43.
But it is a common instance of the calamitous state of human life that
when we seek to avoid one mischief we fall into a worse, and that the
end of one trouble is often the beginning of another; so that we are
least safe when we are most secure.
(2.) The earth itself will be shaken to pieces. It will be literally so
at last, when all the works therein shall be burnt up; and it is
often figuratively so before that period. The windows from on high
are open to pour down wrath, as in the universal deluge. Upon
the wicked God shall rain snares
(Psalms 11:6);
and, the fountains of the great deep being broken up, the
foundations of the earth do shake of course, the frame of nature is
unhinged, and all is in confusion. See how elegantly this is expressed
(Isaiah 24:19,20):
The earth is utterly broken down; it is clean dissolved; it is moved
exceedingly, moved out of its place. God shakes heaven and
earth,
Haggai 2:6.
See the misery of those who lay up their treasure in the things of the
earth and mind those things; they place their confidence in that which
will shortly be utterly broken down and dissolved. The earth shall
reel to and fro like a drunkard; so unsteady, so uncertain, are all
the motions of these things. Worldly men dwell in it as in a palace, as
in a castle, as in an impregnable tower; but it shall be removed
like a cottage, so easily, so suddenly, and with so little loss to
the great landlord. The pulling down of the earth will be but like the
pulling down of a cottage, which the country is willing to be
rid of, because it does but harbour beggars; and therefore no care is
taken to rebuild it: It shall fall, and not rise again; but
there shall be new heavens and a new earth, in which shall dwell
nothing but righteousness. But what is it that shakes the earth thus
and sinks it? It is the transgression thereof that shall be heavy upon
it. Note, Sin is a burden to the whole creation; it is a heavy burden,
a burden under which it groans now and will sink at last. Sin is the
ruin of states, and kingdoms, and families; they fall under the weight
of that talent of lead,
Zechariah 5:7,8.
(3.) God will have a particular controversy with the kings and great
men of the earth
(Isaiah 24:21):
He will punish the host of the high ones. Hosts of princes are
no more before God than hosts of common men; what can a host of high
ones do with their combined force when the Most High, the Lord of
hosts, contends with them to abase their height, and scatter their
hosts, and break all their confederacies? The high ones, that are on
high, that are puffed up with their height and grandeur, that think
themselves so high that they are out of the reach of any danger, God
will visit upon them all their pride and cruelty, with which they have
oppressed and injured their neighbours and subjects, and it shall now
return upon their own heads. The kings of the earth shall now be
reckoned with upon the earth, to show that verily there is a God
that judges in the earth and will render to the proudest of kings
according to the fruit of their doings. Let those that are trampled
upon by the high ones of the earth comfort themselves with this, that
though they cannot, dare not, must not, resist them, yet there is a God
that will call them to an account, that will triumph over them upon
their own dunghill: for the earth they are kings of is in the eye of
God no better. This is general only. It is particularly foretold
(Isaiah 24:22)
that they shall be gathered together as prisoners, convicted
condemned prisoners, are gathered in the pit, or dungeon, and
there they shall be shut up under close confinement. The kings
and high ones, who took all possible liberty themselves, and took a
pride and pleasure in shutting up others, shall now be themselves shut
up. Let not the free man glory in his freedom, any more than the strong
man in his strength, for he knows not what restraints he is reserved
for. But after many days they shall be visited, either,
[1.] They shall be visited in wrath; it is the same word, in another
form, that is used
(Isaiah 24:21),
the Lord shall punish them; they shall be reserved to the day of
execution, as condemned prisoners are, and as fallen angels are
reserved in chains of darkness to the judgment of the great day,
Jude 1:6.
Let this account for the delays of divine vengeance; sentence is not
executed speedily, because execution-day has not yet come, and perhaps
will not come till after many days; but it is certain that the wicked
is reserved for the day of destruction, and is therefore preserved in
the mean time, but shall be brought forth to the day of wrath,
Job 21:30.
Let us therefore judge nothing before the time.
[2.] They shall be visited in mercy, and be discharged from their
imprisonment, and shall again obtain, if not their dignity, yet their
liberty. Nebuchadnezzar, in his conquests, made many kings and princes
his captives, and kept them in the dungeon in Babylon, and, among the
rest, Jehoiachin King of Judah; but after many days, when
Nebuchadnezzar's head was laid, his son visited them, and granted (as
should seem) some reviving to them all in their bondage; for it is made
an instance of his particular kindness to Jehoiachin that he set his
throne above the throne of the rest of the kings that were with
him,
Jeremiah 52:32.
If we apply this to the general state of mankind, it imports a
revolution of conditions; those that were high are punished, those that
were punished are relieved, after many days, that none in this world
may be secure though their condition be ever so prosperous, nor any
despair though their condition be ever so deplorable.
3. Glory to God in all this,
Isaiah 24:23.
When all this comes to pass, when the proud enemies of God's church are
humbled and brought down,
(1.) Then it shall appear, beyond contradiction, that the Lord reigns,
which is always true, but not always alike evident. When the kings of
the earth are punished for their tyranny and oppression, then it is
proclaimed and proved to all the world that God is King of kings--King
above them, by whom they are accountable--that he reigns as Lord of
hosts, of all hosts, of their hosts,--that he reigns in Mount
Zion, and in Jerusalem, in his church, for the honour and welfare
of that, pursuant to the promises on which that is founded, reigns in
his word and ordinances,--that he reigns before his ancients,
before all his saints, especially before his ministers, the elders of
his church, who have their eye upon all the out-goings of his power and
providence, and, in all these events, observe his hand. God's ancients,
the old disciples, the experienced Christians, that have often, when
they have been perplexed, gone into the sanctuary of God in Zion and
Jerusalem, and acquainted themselves with his manifestations of himself
there, shall see more than others of God's dominion and sovereignty in
these operations of his providence.
(2.) Then it shall appear, beyond comparison, that he reigns
gloriously, in such brightness and lustre that the moon shall
be confounded and the sun ashamed, as the smaller lights are
eclipsed and extinguished by the greater. Great men, who thought
themselves to have as bright a lustre and as vast a dominion as the sun
and moon, shall be ashamed when God appears above them, much more when
he appears against them. Then shall their faces be filled with
shame, that they may seek God's name. The eastern nations
worshipped the sun and moon; but, when God shall appear so gloriously
for his people against his and their enemies, all these pretended
deities shall be ashamed that ever they received the homage of their
deluded worshippers. The glory of the Creator infinitely outshines the
glory of the brightest creatures. In the great day, when the Judge of
heaven and earth shall shine forth in his glory, the sun shall
by his transcendent lustre be turned into darkness and the moon into
blood.
Matthew Henry "Verse by Verse Commentary for 'Isaiah' Matthew Henry Bible Commentary".
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