In this chapter the prophet goes on to show,
I. What great things God would do for his church and people, which
should now shortly be accomplished in the deliverance of Jerusalem from
Sennacherib and the destruction of the Assyrian army; but it is
expressed generally, for the encouragement of the church in after ages,
with reference to the power and prevalency of her enemies.
1. That proud oppressors should be reckoned with,
Isaiah 27:1.
2. That care should be taken of the church, as of God's vineyard,
Isaiah 27:2,3.
3. That God would let fall his controversy with the people, upon their
return to him,
Isaiah 27:4,5.
4. That he would greatly multiply and increase them,
Isaiah 27:6.
5. That, as to their afflictions, the property of them should be
altered
(Isaiah 27:7),
they should be mitigated and moderated
(Isaiah 27:8),
and sanctified,
Isaiah 27:9.
6. That though the church might be laid waste, and made desolate, for a
time
(Isaiah 27:10,11),
yet it should be restored, and the scattered members should be gathered
together again,
Isaiah 27:12,13.
All this is applicable to the grace of the gospel, and God's promises
to, and providences concerning, the Christian church, and such as
belong to it.
The Doom of Persecutors; The Privilege of Saints.
B. C. 718.
1 In that day the LORD with his sore and great and strong sword
shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan that
crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in the
sea.
2 In that day sing ye unto her, A vineyard of red wine.
3 I the LORD do keep it; I will water it every moment: lest
any hurt it, I will keep it night and day.
4 Fury is not in me: who would set the briers and thorns
against me in battle? I would go through them, I would burn them
together.
5 Or let him take hold of my strength, that he may make peace
with me; and he shall make peace with me.
6 He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root: Israel
shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit.
The prophet is here singing of judgment and mercy,
I. Of judgment upon the enemies of God's church
(Isaiah 27:1),
tribulation to those that trouble it,
2 Thessalonians 1:6.
When the Lord comes out of his place, to punish the inhabitants of
the earth
(Isaiah 26:21),
he will be sure to punish leviathan, the dragon that is in
the sea, every proud oppressing tyrant, that is the terror of the
mighty, and, like the leviathan, is so fierce that none dares stir
him up, and his heart as hard as a stone, and when he
raises up himself the mighty are afraid,
Job 41:10,24,25.
The church has many enemies, but commonly some one that is more
formidable than the rest. So Sennacherib was in his day, and
Nebuchadnezzar in his, and Antiochus in his; so Pharaoh had been
formerly, and is called leviathan and the dragon,
Isaiah 51:9,Ps+74:13,14,Eze+29:3.
The New-Testament church has had its leviathans; we read of a great red
dragon ready to devour it,
Revelation 12:3.
Those malignant persecuting powers are here compared to the leviathan
for bulk, and strength, and the mighty bustle they make in the
world,--to dragons for their rage and fury,--to serpents, piercing
serpents, penetrating in their counsels, quick in their motions,
and which, if they once get in their head, will soon wind in their
whole body,--crossing like a bar (so the margin), standing in
the way of all their neighbours and obstructing them,--to crooked
serpents, subtle and insinuating, but perverse and mischievous.
Great and mighty princes, if they oppose the people of God, are in
God's account as dragons and serpents, the plagues of mankind; and the
Lord will punish them in due time. They are too big for men to deal
with and call to an account, and therefore the great God will take the
matter into his own hands. He has a sore, and great, and strong
sword, wherewith to do execution upon them when the measure of
their iniquity is full and their day has come to fall. It is
emphatically expressed in the original: The Lord with his sword,
that cruel one, and that great one, and that strong one, shall
punish this unwieldy, this unruly criminal; and it shall be capital
punishment: He shall slay the dragon that is in the sea; for the
wages of his sin is death. This shall not only be a prevention of his
doing further mischief, as the slaying of a wild beast, but a just
punishment for the mischief he has done, as the putting of a traitor or
rebel to death. God has a strong sword for the doing of this, variety
of judgments sufficient to humble the proudest and break the most
powerful of his enemies; and he will do it when the day of execution
comes: In that day he will punish, his day which is coming,
Psalms 37:13.
This is applicable to the spiritual victories obtained by our Lord
Jesus over the powers of darkness. He not only disarmed, spoiled, and
cast out, the prince of this world, but with his strong sword, the
virtue of his death and the preaching of his gospel, he does and will
destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil,
that great leviathan, that old serpent, the dragon. He shall be bound,
that he may not deceive the nations, and that is a punishment to him
(Revelation 20:2,3);
and at length, for deceiving the nations, he shall be cast into the
lake of fire,
Revelation 20:10.
II. Of mercy to the church. In that same day, when God is punishing the
leviathan, let the church and all her friends be easy and cheerful; let
those that attend her sing to her for her comfort, sing her asleep with
these assurances; let it be sung in her assemblies,
1. That she is God's vineyard, and is under his particular care,
Isaiah 27:2,3.
She is, in God's eye, a vineyard of red wine. The world is as a
fruitless worthless wilderness; but the church is enclosed as a
vineyard, a peculiar place, and of value, that has great care taken of
it and great pains taken with it, and from which precious fruits are
gathered, wherewith they honour God and man. It is a vineyard of red
wine, yielding the best and choicest grapes, intimating the
reformation of the church, that it now brings forth good fruit unto
God, whereas before it brought forth fruit to itself, or brought forth
wild grapes,
Isaiah 5:4.
Now God takes care,
(1.) Of the safety of this vineyard: I the Lord do keep it. He
speaks this as glorying in it that he is, and has undertaken to be, the
keeper of Israel. Those that bring forth fruit to God are and shall be
always under his protection. He speaks this as assuring us that they
shall be so: I the Lord, that can do every thing, but cannot lie
nor deceive, I do keep it; lest any hurt it, I will keep it night
and day. God's vineyard in this world lies much exposed to injury;
there are many that would hurt it, would tread it down and lay it waste
(Psalms 80:13);
but God will suffer no real hurt or damage to be done it, but what he
will bring good out of. He will keep it constantly, night and day, and
not without need, for the enemies are restless in their designs and
attempts against it, and, both night and day, seek an opportunity to do
it a mischief. God will keep it in the night of affliction and
persecution, and in the day of peace and prosperity, the temptations of
which are no less dangerous. God's people shall be preserved, not only
from the pestilence that walketh in darkness, but from the
destruction that wasteth at noon-day,
Psalms 91:6.
This vineyard shall be well fenced.
(2.) Of the fruitfulness of this vineyard: I will water it every
moment, and yet it shall not be overwatered. The still and silent
dews of God's grace and blessing shall continually descend upon it,
that it may bring forth much fruit. We need the constant and continual
waterings of the divine grace; for, if that be at any time withdrawn,
we wither, and come to nothing. God waters his vineyard by the ministry
of the word by his servants the prophets, whose doctrine shall drop as
the dew. Paul plants, and Apollos waters, but God gives the increase;
for without him the watchman wakes and the husbandman waters in
vain.
2. That, though sometimes he contends with his people, yet, upon their
submission, he will be reconciled to them,
Isaiah 27:4,5.
Fury is not in him towards his vineyard; though he meets with
many things in it that are offensive to him, yet he does not seek
advantages against it, nor is extreme to mark what is amiss in it. It
is true if he find in it briers and thorns instead of vines, and they
be set in battle against him (as indeed that in the vineyard which is
not for him is against him), he will tread them down and burn them; but
otherwise, "If I am angry with my people, they know what course to
take; let them humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and so
take hold of my strength with a sincere desire to make their
peace with me, and I will soon be reconciled to them, and all shall be
well." God sees the sins of his people and is displeased with them;
but, upon their repentance, he turns away his wrath. This may very well
be construed as a summary of the doctrine of the gospel, with which the
church is to be watered every moment.
(1.) Here is a quarrel supposed between God and man; for here is a
battle fought, and peace to be made. It is an old quarrel, ever since
sin first entered. It is, on God's part, a righteous quarrel, but, on
man's part, most unrighteous.
(2.) Here is a gracious invitation given us to make up this quarrel,
and to get these matters in variance accommodated: "Let him that is
desirous to be at peace with God take hold of his strength, of his
strong arm, which is lifted up against the sinner to strike him dead;
and let him by supplication keep back the stroke. Let him wrestle with
me, as Jacob did, resolving not to let me go without a blessing; and he
shall be Israel--a prince with God." Pardoning mercy is called
the power of our Lord; let him take hold of that. Christ is the arm
of the Lord,
Isaiah 53:1.
Christ crucified is the power of God
(1 Corinthians 1:24);
let him by a lively faith take hold of him, as a man that is sinking
catches hold of a bough, or cord, or plank, that is within his reach,
or as the malefactor took hold of the horns of the altar, believing
that there is no other name by which he can be saved, by which he can
be reconciled.
(3.) Here is a threefold cord of arguments to persuade us to do this.
[1.] Time and space are given us to do it in; for fury is not in
God; he does not carry it towards us as great men carry it towards
their inferiors, when the one is in a fault and the other in a fury.
Men in a fury will not take time for consideration; it is, with them,
but a word and a blow. Furious men are soon angry, and implacable when
they are angry; a little thing provokes them, and no little thing will
pacify them. But it is not so with God; he considers our frame, is slow
to anger, does not stir up all his wrath, nor always chide.
[2.] It is in vain to think of contesting with him. If we persist in
our quarrel with him, and think to make our part good, it is but like
setting briers and thorns before a consuming fire, which will be so far
from giving check to the progress of it that they will but make it burn
the more outrageously. We are not an equal match for Omnipotence.
Woe unto him therefore that strives with his Maker! He
knows not the power of his anger.
[3.] This is the only way, and it is a sure way, to reconciliation:
"Let him take this course to make peace with me, and he shall make
peace; and thereby good, all good, shall come unto him." God is
willing to be reconciled to us if we be but willing to be reconciled to
him.
3. That the church of God in the world shall be a growing body, and
come at length to be a great body
(Isaiah 27:6):
In times to come (so some read it), in after-times, when
these calamities are overpast, or in the days of the gospel, the latter
days, he shall cause Jacob to take root, deeper root than ever
yet; for the gospel church shall be more firmly fixed than ever the
Jewish church was, and shall spread further. Or, He shall cause
those of Jacob that come back out of their captivity, or (as we
read it) those that come of Jacob, to take root downward, and bear
fruit upward,
Isaiah 37:31.
They shall be established in a prosperous state, and then they shall
blossom and bud, and give hopeful prospects of a great increase;
and so it shall prove, for they shall fill the face of the world
with fruit. Many shall be brought into the church, proselytes shall
be numerous, some out of all the nations about that shall be to the God
of Israel for a name and a praise; and the converts shall be fruitful
in the fruits of righteousness. The preaching of the gospel brought
forth fruit in all the world
(Colossians 1:6),
fruit that remains,
John 15:16.
Correction and Compassion.
B. C. 718.
7 Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him? or
is he slain according to the slaughter of them that are slain by
him?
8 In measure, when it shooteth forth, thou wilt debate with it:
he stayeth his rough wind in the day of the east wind.
9 By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged; and
this is all the fruit to take away his sin; when he maketh all
the stones of the altar as chalkstones that are beaten in sunder,
the groves and images shall not stand up.
10 Yet the defenced city shall be desolate, and the
habitation forsaken, and left like a wilderness: there shall the
calf feed, and there shall he lie down, and consume the branches
thereof.
11 When the boughs thereof are withered, they shall be broken
off: the women come, and set them on fire: for it is a people
of no understanding: therefore he that made them will not have
mercy on them, and he that formed them will show them no favour.
12 And it shall come to pass in that day, that the LORD shall
beat off from the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt,
and ye shall be gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel.
13 And it shall come to pass in that day, that the great
trumpet shall be blown, and they shall come which were ready to
perish in the land of Assyria, and the outcasts in the land of
Egypt, and shall worship the LORD in the holy mount at Jerusalem.
Here is the prophet again singing of mercy and judgment, not, as
before, judgment to the enemies and mercy to the church, but judgment
to the church and mercy mixed with that judgment.
I. Here is judgment threatened even to Jacob and Israel. They shall
blossom and bud
(Isaiah 27:6),
but,
1. They shall be smitten and slain
(Isaiah 27:7),
some of them shall. If God find any thing amiss among them, he will lay
them under the tokens of his displeasure for it. Judgment shall begin
at the house of God, and those whom God has known of all the families
of the earth he will punish in the first place.
2. Jerusalem, their defenced city, shall be desolate,
Isaiah 27:10,11.
"God having tried a variety of methods with them for their reformation,
which, as to many, have proved ineffectual, he will for a time lay
their country waste," which was accomplished when Jerusalem was
destroyed by the Chaldeans; then that habitation was for a long
time forsaken. If less judgments do not do the work, God will
send greater; for when he judges he will overcome. Jerusalem had
been a defenced city, not so much by art or nature as by grace and the
divine protection; but, when God was provoked to withdraw, her defence
departed from her, and then she was left like a wilderness. "And in the
pleasant gardens of Jerusalem cattle shall feed, shall lie down there,
and there shall be none to disturb them or drive them away; there they
shall be levant and couchant, and they shall eat the tender
branches of the fruit-trees," which perhaps further signifies that the
people should become an easy prey to their enemies. "When the boughs
thereof are withered as they grow upon the tree, being blasted by
winds and frosts and not pruned, they shall be broken off for
fuel, and the women and children shall come and set them on
fire. There shall be a total destruction, for the very trees shall
be destroyed." And this is a figure of the deplorable state of the
vineyard
(Isaiah 27:2)
when it brought forth wild grapes
(Isaiah 5:2);
and our Saviour seems to refer to this when he says of the branches of
the vine which abide not in him that they are cast forth and
withered, and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they
are burned
(John 15:6),
which was in a particular manner fulfilled in the unbelieving Jews. The
similitude is explained in the following words, It is a people of no
understanding, brutish and sottish, and destitute of the knowledge
of God, and that have no relish or savour of divine things, like a
withered branch that has no sap in it; and this is at the bottom of all
those sins for which God left them desolate, their idolatry first and
afterwards their infidelity. Wicked people, however in other things
they may be wits and politicians, in their greatest concerns are of no
understanding; and their ignorance, being wilful, shall not only not be
their excuse, but it shall be the ground of their condemnation; for
therefore he that made them, that gave them their being, will
not have mercy on them, nor save them from the ruin they bring upon
themselves; and he that formed them into a people, formed them
for himself, to show forth his praise, seeing they do not answer the
end of their formation, but hate to be reformed, to be new-formed, will
reject them, and show them no favour; and then they are undone:
for, if he that made us by his power do not make us happy in his
favour, we had better never have been made. Sinners flatter themselves
with hopes of impunity, at least that they shall not be dealt with so
severely as their ministers tell them, because God is merciful and
because he is their Maker. But here we see how weak and insufficient
those pleas will be; for, if they be of no understanding, he that made
them, though he made them, and hates nothing that he has made, and
though he has mercy in store for those who so far understand their
interests as to apply to him for it, yet on them he will have no mercy,
and will show them no favour.
II. Here is a great deal of mercy mixed with this judgment; for there
are good people mixed with those that are corrupt and degenerate, a
remnant according to the election of grace, on whom God will have
mercy and to whom he will show favour: and these promises seem to point
at all the calamities of the church, for which God would graciously
provide these allays.
1. Though they shall be smitten and slain, yet not to that degree, and
in that manner, in which their enemies shall be smitten and slain,
Isaiah 27:7.
God has smitten Jacob, and he is slain. Many of those that
understand among the people shall fall by the sword and by flame many
days,
Daniel 11:33.
But it shall not be as those are smitten and slain,
(1.) Who smote him formerly, who were the rod of God's anger and the
staff in his hand, which he made us of for the correction of his
people, and to whose turn it shall come to be reckoned with even for
that: the child is spared, but the rod is burnt.
(2.) Who shall afterwards be slain by him, when he shall get the
dominion, and repay them in their own coin, or slain for his sake in
the pleading of his cause. God's people and God's enemies are here
represented,
[1.] As struggling with each other; so the seed of the woman and the
seed of the serpent have been, are, and will be. In this contest there
are slain on both sides. God makes use of wicked men, not only to
smite, but to slay his people; for they are his sword,
Psalms 17:13.
But, when the cup of trembling comes to be put into their hand, it will
be much worse with them than ever it was with God's people in their
greatest straits. The seed of the woman has only his heel bruised, but
the serpent has his head crushed and broken. Note, Though God's
persecuted people may be great losers, and great sufferers, for a
while, yet those that oppress them will prove to be greater losers and
greater sufferers at last, here or hereafter; for God will render
double to them,
Revelation 18:6.
[2.] As sharing together in the calamities of this present time. They
are both smitten, both slain, and both by the hand of God; for there is
one event to the righteous and to the wicked. But is Jacob
smitten as his enemies are? No, by no means; to him the property is
altered, and it becomes quite another thing. Note, However it may seem
to us, there is really a vast difference between the afflictions and
deaths of good people and the afflictions and deaths of wicked
people.
2. Though God will debate with them, yet it shall be in measure, and
the affliction shall be mitigated, moderated, and proportioned to their
strength, not to their deserts,
Isaiah 27:8.
He will deal out afflictions to them as the wise physician prescribes
medicines to his patients, just such a quantity of each ingredient, or
orders how much blood shall be taken when a vein is opened: thus God
orders the troubles of his people, not suffering them to be tempted
above what they are able,
1 Corinthians 10:13.
He measures out their afflictions by a little at a time, that they may
not be pressed above measure; for he knows their frame, and corrects in
judgment, and does not stir up all his wrath. When the affliction is
shooting forth, when he is sending it out and giving it its commission,
then he debates in measure, and not in extremity. He considers what we
can bear when he begins to correct; and when he proceeds in his
controversy, so that it is the day of his east-wind, which is
not only blustering and noisy, but blasting and noxious, yet he stays
his rough wind, checks it, and sets bounds to it, does not suffer it to
blow so hard as was feared; when he is winnowing his corn, it is with a
gentle gale, that shall only blow away the chaff, but not the good
corn. God has the winds at his command, and every affliction under his
check. Hitherto it shall go, but no further. Let us not despair
when things are at the worst; be the winds ever so rough, ever so high,
God can say unto them, Peace, be still.
3. Though God will afflict them, yet he will make their afflictions to
work for the good of their souls, and correct them as the father does
the child, to drive out the foolishness that is bound up in their
hearts
(Isaiah 27:9):
By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged. This is
the design of the affliction, to this it is adapted as a proper means,
and, by the grace of God working with it, it shall have this blessed
effect. It shall mortify the habits of sin; by this those defilements
of the soul shall be purged away. It shall break them off from the
practice of sin: This is all the fruit, this is it that God
intends, this is all the harm it will do them, to take away their
sin, than which they could not have a greater kindness done them,
though it be at the expense of an affliction. Therefore, because the
affliction is mitigated and moderated, and the rough wind stayed,
therefore we may conclude that he designs their reformation, not their
destruction; and, because he deals thus gently with us, we should
therefore study to answer his ends in afflicting us. The particular sin
which the affliction was intended to cure them of was the sin of
idolatry, the sin which did most easily beset that people and to which
they were strangely addicted. Ephraim is joined to idols. But by
the captivity in Babylon they were not only weaned from this sin, but
set against it. Ephraim shall say, What have I do to any more with
idols? Jacob has his sin taken away, his beloved sin, when he
makes all the stones of the altar, of his idolatrous altar, the
stones of which were precious and sacred to him, as chalk-stones
that are beaten asunder; he not only has them in contempt, and
values them no more than chalk-stones, but he conceives an indignation
at them, and, in a holy revenge, beats them asunder as easily as
chalk-stones are broken to pieces. The groves and the images shall
not stand before this penitent, but they shall be thrown down too,
never to be set up again. This was according to the law for the
demolishing and destroying of all the monuments of idolatry
(Deuteronomy 7:5);
and according to this promise, since the captivity in Babylon, no
people in the world have such a rooted aversion to idols and idolatry
as the people of the Jews. Note, The design of affliction is to
separate between us and sin, especially that which has been our own
iniquity; and then it appears that the affliction has done us good
when we keep at a distance from the occasions of sin, and use all
needful precaution that we may not only not relapse into it, but not so
much as be tempted to it,
Psalms 119:67.
4. Though Jerusalem shall be desolate and forsaken for a time, yet
there will come a day when its scattered friends shall resort to it
again out of all the countries whither they were dispersed
(Isaiah 27:12,13);
though the body of the nation is abandoned as a people of no
understanding, yet those that are indeed children of Israel shall be
gathered together again, as the sheep of the flock when the shepherds
that scattered them are reckoned with,
Ezekiel 34:10-19.
Now observe concerning these scattered Israelites,
(1.) Whence they shall be fetched: The Lord shall beat them off
as fruit from the tree, or beat them out as corn out of the ear. He
shall find them out, and separate them from those among whom they
dwelt, and with whom they seemed to be incorporated, from the
channel of the river Euphrates north-east, unto Nile, the
stream of Egypt, which lay south-west--those that were driven into
the land of Assyria, and were captives there in the land of their
enemies, where they were ready to perish for want of necessaries, and
ready to despair of deliverance--and those that were outcasts in the
land of Egypt, whither many of those that were left behind, after
the captivity in Babylon, went, contrary to God's express command
(Jeremiah 43:6,7),
and there lived as outcasts: God has mercy in store for them all, and
will make it to appear that, though they are cast out, they are not
cast off.
(2.) In what manner they shall be brought back: "You shall be
gathered one by one, not in multitudes, not in troops forcing your
way; but silently, and as it were by stealth, dropping in, first one,
and then another." This intimates that the remnant that shall be saved
consists but of few, and those saved with difficulty, and so as by
fire, scarcely saved; they shall not come for company, but as God shall
stir up every man's spirit.
(3.) By what means they shall be gathered together: The great
trumpet shall be blown, and then they shall come. Cyrus's
proclamation of liberty to the captives is this great trumpet, which
awakened the Jews that were asleep in their thraldom to bestir
themselves; it was like the sounding of the jubilee-trumpet, which
published the year of release. This is applicable both to the preaching
of the gospel, by which sinners are gathered in to the grace of God,
such as were outcasts and ready to perish (those that were afar off are
made nigh; the gospel proclaims the acceptable year of the Lord), and
also to the archangel's trumpet at the last day, by which saints shall
be gathered to the glory of God, that lay as outcasts in their graves.
(4.) For what end they shall be gathered together: To worship the
Lord in the holy mount at Jerusalem. When the captives rallied
again, and returned to their own land, the chief thing they had their
eye upon, and the first thing they applied themselves to, was the
worship of God. The holy temple was in ruins, but they had the holy
mount, the place of the altar,
Genesis 13:4.
Liberty to worship God is the most valuable and desirable liberty; and,
after restraints and dispersions, a free access to his house should be
more welcome to us than a free access to our own houses. Those that are
gathered by the sounding of the gospel trumpet are brought in to
worship God and added to the church; and the great trumpet of all will
gather the saints together, to serve God day and night in his
temple.
Matthew Henry "Verse by Verse Commentary for 'Isaiah' Matthew Henry Bible Commentary".
.