This chapter relates to the same events as the foregoing chapter, the
distress of Judah and Jerusalem by Sennacherib's invasion and their
deliverance out of that distress by the destruction of the Assyrian
army. These are intermixed in the prophecy, in the way of a Pindaric.
Observe,
I. The great distress that Judah and Jerusalem should then be brought
into,
Isaiah 33:7-9.
II. The particular frights which the sinners in Zion should then be in,
Isaiah 33:13,14.
III. The prayers of good people to God in this distress,
Isaiah 33:2.
IV. The holy security which they should enjoy in the midst of this
trouble,
Isaiah 33:15,16.
V. The destruction of the army of the Assyrians
(Isaiah 33:1-3),
in which God would be greatly glorified,
Isaiah 33:5,10-12.
VI. The enriching of the Jews with the spoil of the Assyrian camp,
Isaiah 33:4,23,24.
VII. The happy settlement of Jerusalem, and the Jewish state, upon
this. Religion shall be uppermost
(Isaiah 33:6),
and their civil state shall flourish,
Isaiah 33:17-22.
This was soon fulfilled, but is written for our learning.
Assyria Threatened.
B. C. 710.
1 Woe to thee that spoilest, and thou wast not spoiled; and
dealest treacherously, and they dealt not treacherously with
thee! when thou shalt cease to spoil, thou shalt be spoiled;
and when thou shalt make an end to deal treacherously, they
shall deal treacherously with thee.
2 O LORD, be gracious unto us; we have waited for thee: be thou
their arm every morning, our salvation also in the time of
trouble.
3 At the noise of the tumult the people fled; at the lifting up
of thyself the nations were scattered.
4 And your spoil shall be gathered like the gathering of the
caterpillar: as the running to and fro of locusts shall he run
upon them.
5 The LORD is exalted; for he dwelleth on high: he hath filled
Zion with judgment and righteousness.
6 And wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times,
and strength of salvation: the fear of the LORD is his
treasure.
7 Behold, their valiant ones shall cry without: the ambassadors
of peace shall weep bitterly.
8 The highways lie waste, the wayfaring man ceaseth: he hath
broken the covenant, he hath despised the cities, he regardeth no
man.
9 The earth mourneth and languisheth: Lebanon is ashamed
and hewn down: Sharon is like a wilderness; and Bashan and
Carmel shake off their fruits.
10 Now will I rise, saith the LORD; now will I be exalted; now
will I lift up myself.
11 Ye shall conceive chaff, ye shall bring forth stubble: your
breath, as fire, shall devour you.
12 And the people shall be as the burnings of lime: as
thorns cut up shall they be burned in the fire.
Here we have,
I. The proud and false Assyrian justly reckoned with for all his fraud
and violence, and laid under a woe,
Isaiah 33:1.
Observe,
1. The sin which the enemy had been guilty of. He had spoiled the
people of God, and made a prey of them, and herein had broken his
treaty of peace with them, and dealt treacherously. Truth and mercy are
two such sacred things, and have so much of God in them, that those
cannot but be under the wrath of God that make conscience of neither,
but are perfectly lost to both, that care not what mischief they do,
what spoil they make, what dissimulations they are guilty of, nor what
solemn engagements they violate, to compass their own wicked designs.
Bloody and deceitful men are the worst of men.
2. The aggravation of this sin. He spoiled those that had never done
him any injury and that he had no pretence to quarrel with, and dealt
treacherously with those that had always dealt faithfully with him.
Note, The less provocation we have from men to do a wrong thing the
more provocation we give to God by doing it.
3. The punishment he should fall under for this sin. He that spoiled
the cities of Judah shall have his own army destroyed by an angel and
his camp plundered by those whom he had made a prey of. The Chaldeans
shall deal treacherously with the Assyrians and revolt from them. Two
of Sennacherib's own sons shall deal treacherously with him and basely
murder him at his devotions. Note, The righteous God often pays sinners
in their own coin. He that leads into captivity shall go into
captivity,
Revelation 13:10,18:6.
4. The time when he shall be thus dealt with. When he shall make an
end to spoil, and to deal treacherously, not by repentance and
reformation, which might prevent his ruin
(Daniel 4:27),
but when he shall have done his worst, when he shall have gone as far
as God would permit him to go, to the utmost of his tether, then the
cup of trembling shall be put into his hand. When he shall have arrived
at his full stature in impiety, shall have filled up the measure of his
iniquity, then all shall be called over again. When he has done God
will begin, for his day is coming.
II. The praying people of God earnest at the throne of grace for mercy
for the land now in its distress
(Isaiah 33:2):
"O Lord! be merciful to us. Men are cruel; be thou gracious. We
have deserved thy wrath, but we entreat thy favour; and, if we may find
the propitious to us, we are happy; the trouble we are in cannot hurt
us, shall not ruin us. It is in vain to expect relief from creatures;
we have no confidence in the Egyptians, but we have waited for
thee only, resolving to submit to thee, whatever the issue of the
trouble be, and hoping that it shall be a comfortable issue." Those
that by faith humbly wait for God shall certainly find him gracious to
them. They prayed,
1. For those that were employed in military services for them: "Be
thou their arm every morning. Hezekiah, and his princes, and all
the men of war, need continual supplies of strength and courage from
thee; supply their need therefore, and be to them a God all-sufficient.
Every morning, when they go forth upon the business of the day, and
perhaps have new work to do and new difficulties to encounter, let them
be afresh animated and invigorated, and, as the day, so let the
strength be." In our spiritual warfare our own hands are not
sufficient for us, nor can we bring any thing to pass unless God not
only strengthen our arms
(Genesis 49:24),
but be himself our arm; so entirely do we depend upon him as our arm
every morning, so constantly do we depend upon his power, as well as
his compassions, which are new every morning,
Lamentations 3:23.
If God leaves us to ourselves any morning, we are undone; we must
therefore every morning commit ourselves to him, and go forth in his
strength to do the work of the day in its day.
2. For the body of the people: "Be thou our salvation also in the
time of trouble, ours who sit still, and do not venture into the
high places of the field." They depend upon God not only as their
Saviour, to work deliverance for them, but as their salvation itself;
for, whatever becomes of their secular interests, they will reckon
themselves safe and saved if they have him for their God. If he
undertake to be their Saviour, he will be their salvation; for as
for God his work is perfect. Some read it thus: "Thou who wast
their arm every morning, who wast the continual strength and help
of our fathers before us, be thou our salvation also in time of
trouble. Help us as thou helpedst them; they looked unto thee
and were lightened
(Psalms 34:5);
let us then not walk in darkness."
III. The Assyrian army ruined and their camp made a rich but cheap and
easy prey to Judah and Jerusalem. No sooner is the prayer made
(Isaiah 33:2)
than it is answered
(Isaiah 33:3),
nay, it is outdone. They prayed that God would save them from their
enemies; but he did more than that; he gave them victory over their
enemies and abundant cause to triumph; for,
1. The strength of the Assyrian camp was broken
(Isaiah 33:3)
when the destroying angel slew so many thousands of them: At the
noise of the tumult, of the shrieks of the dying men (who, we may
suppose, did not die silently), the rest of the people fled, and
shifted every one for his own safety. When God did thus lift up himself
the several nations, or clans, of which the army was composed, were
scattered. It was time to stir when such an unprecedented plague broke
out among them. When God arises his enemies are scattered,
Psalms 68:1.
2. The spoil of the Assyrian camp is seized, by way of reprisal, for
all the desolations of the defenced cities of Judah
(Isaiah 33:4):
Your spoil shall be gathered by the inhabitants of Jerusalem,
like the gathering of the caterpillar, and as the running to
and fro of locusts, that is, the spoilers shall as easily and as
quickly make themselves masters of the riches of the Assyrians as a
host of caterpillars, or locusts, make a field, or a tree, bare. Thus
the wealth of the sinner is laid up for the just and Israel is
enriched with the spoil of the Egyptians. Some make the Assyrians to be
the caterpillars and locusts, which, when they are killed, are gathered
together in heaps, as the frogs of Egypt, and are run upon, and trodden
to dirt.
IV. God and his Israel glorified and exalted hereby. When the spoil of
the enemy is thus gathered,
1. God will have the praise of it
(Isaiah 33:5):
The Lord is exalted. It is his honour thus to abase proud men,
and hide them in the dust, together; thus he magnifies his own name,
and his people give him the glory of it, as Israel when the Egyptians
were drowned,
Exodus 15:1,2,
&c. He is exalted as one that dwells on high, out of the reach of their
blasphemies, and that has an over-ruling power over them, and wherein
they deal proudly delights to show himself above them-that does what he
will, and they cannot resist him.
2. His people will have the blessing of it. When God lifts up himself
to scatter the nations that are in confederacy against Jerusalem
(Isaiah 33:3)
then, as a preparative for that, or as the fruit and product of it,
he has filled Zion with judgment and righteousness, not only
with a sense of justice, but with a zeal for it and a universal care
that it be duly administered. It shall again be called, The city of
righteousness,
Isaiah 1:26.
In this the grace of God is exalted, as much as his providence was in
the destruction of the Assyrian army. We may conclude God has mercy in
store for a people when he fills them with judgment and righteousness,
when all sorts of people, and all their actions and affairs, are
governed by them, and they are so full of them that no other
considerations can crowd in to sway them against these. Hezekiah and
his people are encouraged
(Isaiah 33:6)
with an assurance that God would stand by them in their distress. Here
is,
(1.) A gracious promise of God for them to stay themselves upon:
Wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times, and
strength of salvation. Here is a desirable end proposed, and that
is the stability of our times, that things be not disturbed and
unhinged at home, and the strength of salvation, deliverance
from, and success against, enemies abroad. The salvation that God
ordains for his people has strength in it; it is a horn of salvation.
And here are the way and means for obtaining this end--wisdom and
knowledge, not only piety, but prudence. That is it which, by the
blessing of God, will be the stability of our times and the strength
of salvation, that wisdom which is first pure, then peaceable, and
which sacrifices private interests to a public good; such prudence as
this will establish truth and peace, and fortify the bulwarks in
defence of them.
(2.) A pious maxim of state for Hezekiah and his people to govern
themselves by: The fear of the Lord is his treasure. It is God's
treasure in the world, from which he receives his tribute; or, rather,
it is the prince's treasure. A good prince accounts it so (that wisdom
is better than gold) and he shall find it so. Note, True religion is
the true treasure of any prince or people; it denominates them rich.
Those places that have plenty of Bibles, and ministers, and serious
good people, are really rich; and it contributes to that which makes a
nation rich in this world. It is therefore the interest of a people to
support religion among them and to take heed of every thing that
threatens to hinder it.
V. The great distress that Jerusalem was brought into described, that
those who believed the prophet might know beforehand what troubles were
coming and might provide accordingly, and that when the foregoing
promise of their deliverance should have its accomplishment the
remembrance of the extremity of their case might help to magnify God in
it and make them the more thankful,
Isaiah 33:7-9.
It is here foretold,
1. That the enemy would be very insolent and abusive and there would
be no dealing with him, either by treaties of peace (for he has
broken the covenant without any hesitation, as if it were below him
to be a servant to his word), or by the preparations of war, for he
has despised the cities; he scorns to take notice either of their
appeals to justice or of their petitions for mercy. He makes himself
master of them so easily (though they are called fenced cities),
and meets with so little resistance, that he despises them, and has no
relentings when he puts all to the sword; for he regards no man, has no
pity or concern, no, not for those that he is under particular
obligations to. He neither fears God nor regards man, but is haughty
and imperious to every one. There are those that take a pride in
trampling upon all mankind, and have neither veneration for the
honourable nor compassion for the miserable.
2. That therefore he would not be brought to any terms of
reconciliation: The valiant ones of Jerusalem, being unable to
make their parts good with him, must be contentedly run down with noise
and insolence, which will make them cry without, because they cannot
serve their country as they might have done against a fair adversary.
The ambassadors sent by Hezekiah to treat of peace,
finding him so haughty and unmanageable, shall weep bitterly for
vexation at the disappointment they had met with in their negotiations;
they shall weep like children, as despairing to find out any expedient
to pacify him.
3. That the country should be made quite desolate for a time by his
army.
(1.) No man durst travel the roads; so that a stop was put to trade and
commerce, and (which was worse) no man could safely go up to Jerusalem,
to keep the solemn feasts: The highways lie waste. While the
fields lie waste, trodden like the highways, the highways lie waste,
untrodden like the fields, for the traveller ceases.
(2.) No man had any profit from the grounds,
Isaiah 33:9.
The earth used to rejoice in its own productions for the service of
God's Israel, but now the enemies of Israel eat them up, or tread them
down: it mourns and languishes; the country looks melancholy and
the country people have misery in their countenances, wanting necessary
food for themselves and their families; the wonted joy of harvest is
turned into lamentation, so withering and uncertain are all worldly
joys. The desolation is universal. That part of the country which
belonged to the ten tribes was already laid waste: "Lebanon
famed for cedars, Sharon for roses, Bashan for cattle,
Carmel for corn, all very fruitful, have now become like
wildernesses, are ashamed to be called by their old names, they
are so unlike what they were. They shake off their fruits before
their time into the hand of the spoiler, which used to be gathered
seasonably by the hand of the owner."
VI. God appearing, at length, in his glory against his proud invader,
Isaiah 33:10.
When things are brought thus to the last extremity,
1. God will magnify himself. He had seemed to sit by as an unconcerned
spectator: "But now will I arise, saith the Lord; now will I
appear and act, and therein I will be not only evidenced, but exalted."
He will not only demonstrate that there is a God that judges in the
earth, but that he is God over all, and higher than the highest. "Now
will I lift up myself, will prepare for action, will act
vigorously, and will be glorified in it." God's time to appear for his
people is when their affairs are reduced to the lowest ebb, when
their strength is gone and there is none shut up nor left,
Deuteronomy 32:36.
When all other helpers fail, then is God's time to help.
2. He will bring down the Assyrian: "You, O Assyrians! are big with
hopes that you shall have all the wealth of Jerusalem for your own, and
are in pain till it be so; but all your hopes shall come to nothing:
You shall conceive chaff, and bring forth stubble, which is not
only worthless and good for nothing, but combustible and proper fuel
for the fire, which it cannot escape, when your own breath as
fire shall devour you, that is, the breath of God's wrath, provoked
against you by the breath of your sins--your malignant breath, the
threatenings and slaughter you breathe out against the people of God,
this shall devour you, and your blasphemous breath against God and his
name." God would make their own tongues to fall upon them, and their
own breath to blow the fire that should consume them; and then no
wonder that the people are as the burnings of lime in a
lime-kiln, all on fire together, and as thorns cut up, which are
dried and withered, and therefore easily take fire and are soon burnt
up. Such was the destruction of the Assyrian army; it was like the
burning up of thorns, which can well be spared, or the burning of lime,
which makes it good for something. The burning of that army enlightened
the world with the knowledge of God's power and made his name shine
brightly.
The Forebodings of Hypocrites; Encouragement to God's People.
B. C. 710.
13 Hear, ye that are far off, what I have done; and, ye that
are near, acknowledge my might.
14 The sinners in Zion are afraid; fearfulness hath surprised
the hypocrites. Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire?
who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?
15 He that walketh righteously, and speaketh uprightly; he that
despiseth the gain of oppressions, that shaketh his hands from
holding of bribes, that stoppeth his ears from hearing of blood,
and shutteth his eyes from seeing evil;
16 He shall dwell on high: his place of defence shall be the
munitions of rocks: bread shall be given him; his waters shall
be sure.
17 Thine eyes shall see the king in his beauty: they shall
behold the land that is very far off.
18 Thine heart shall meditate terror. Where is the scribe?
where is the receiver? where is he that counted the towers?
19 Thou shalt not see a fierce people, a people of a deeper
speech than thou canst perceive; of a stammering tongue, that
thou canst not understand.
20 Look upon Zion, the city of our solemnities: thine eyes
shall see Jerusalem a quiet habitation, a tabernacle that shall
not be taken down; not one of the stakes thereof shall ever be
removed, neither shall any of the cords thereof be broken.
21 But there the glorious LORD will be unto us a place of
broad rivers and streams; wherein shall go no galley with oars,
neither shall gallant ship pass thereby.
22 For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the
LORD is our king; he will save us.
23 Thy tacklings are loosed; they could not well strengthen
their mast, they could not spread the sail: then is the prey of a
great spoil divided; the lame take the prey.
24 And the inhabitant shall not say, I am sick: the people that
dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity.
Here is a preface that commands attention; and it is fit that all
should attend, both near and afar off, to what God says and does
(Isaiah 33:13):
Hear, you that are afar off, whether in place or time. Let
distant regions and future ages hear what God has done. They do so;
they will do so from the scripture, with as much assurance as those
that were near, the neighbouring nations and those that lived at that
time. But whoever hears what God has done, whether near or afar off,
let them acknowledge his might, that it is irresistible, and that he
can do every thing. Those are very stupid who hear what God has done
and yet will not acknowledge his might. Now what is it that God has
done which we must take notice of, and in which we must acknowledge his
might?
I. He has struck a terror upon the sinners in Zion
(Isaiah 33:14):
Fearfulness has surprised the hypocrites. There are sinners in
Zion, hypocrites, that enjoy Zion's privileges and concur in Zion's
services, but their hearts are not right in the sight of God; they keep
up secret haunts of sin under the cloak of a visible profession, which
convicts them of hypocrisy. Sinners in Zion will have a great deal to
answer for above other sinners; and their place in Zion will be so far
from being their security that it will aggravate both their sin and
their punishment. Now those sinners in Zion, though always subject to
secret frights and terrors, were struck with a more than ordinary
consternation from the convictions of their own consciences.
1. When they saw the Assyrian army besieging Jerusalem, and ready to
set fire to it and lay it in ashes, and burn the wasps in the nest.
Finding they could not make their escape to Egypt, as some had done,
and distrusting the promises God had made by his prophets that he would
deliver them, they were at their wits' end, and ran about like men
distracted, crying, "Who among us shall dwell with devouring
fire? Let us therefore abandon the city, and shift for ourselves
elsewhere; one had as good live in everlasting burnings as live here."
Who will stand up for us against this devouring fire? so some
read it. See here how the sinners in Zion are affected when the
judgments of God are abroad; while they were only threatened they
slighted them and made nothing of them; but, when they come to be
executed, they run into the other extreme, then they magnify them, and
make the worst of them; they call them devouring fire and
everlasting burnings, and despair of relief and succour. Those
that rebel against the commands of the word cannot take the comforts of
it in a time of need. Or, rather,
2. When they saw the Assyrian army destroyed; for the destruction of
that is the fire spoken of immediately before,
Isaiah 33:11,12.
When the sinners in Zion saw what dreadful execution the wrath of God
made they were in a great fright, being conscious to themselves that
they had provoked this God by their secretly worshipping other gods;
and therefore they cry out, Who among us shall dwell with this
devouring fire, before which so vast an army is as thorns? Who
among us shall dwell with these everlasting burnings, which
have made the Assyrians as the burnings of lime?
Isaiah 33:12.
Thus they said, or should have said. Note, God's judgments upon the
enemies of Zion should strike a terror upon the sinners in Zion, nay,
David himself trembles at them,
Psalms 119:120.
God himself is this devouring fire,
Hebrews 12:29.
Who is able to stand before him?
1 Samuel 6:20.
His wrath will burn those everlastingly that have made themselves fuel
for it. It is a fire that shall never be quenched, nor will ever go out
of itself; for it is the wrath of an everlasting God preying upon the
conscience of an immortal soul. Nor can the most daring sinners bear up
against it, so as to bear either the execution of it or the fearful
expectation of it. Let this awaken us all to flee from the wrath to
come, by fleeing to Christ as our refuge.
II. He has graciously provided for the security of his people that
trust in him: Hear this, and acknowledge his power in making
those that walk righteously, and speak uprightly, to
dwell on high,
Isaiah 33:15,16.
We have here,
1. The good man's character, which he preserves even in times of common
iniquity, in divers instances.
(1.) He walks righteously. In the whole course of his conversation he
acts by rules of equity, and makes conscience of rendering to all their
due, to God his due, as well as to men theirs. His walk is
righteousness itself; he would not for a world wilfully do an unjust
thing.
(2.) He speaks uprightly, uprightnesses (so the word is); he
speaks what is true and right, and with an honest intention. He cannot
think one thing and speak another, nor look one way and row another.
His word is to him as sacred as his oath, and is not yea and nay.
(3.) He is so far from coveting ill-gotten gain that he despises it. He
thinks it a mean and sordid thing, and unbecoming a man of honour, to
enrich himself by any hardship put upon his neighbour. He scorns to do
a wrong thing, nay, to do a severe thing, though he might get by it. He
does not over-value gain itself, and therefore easily abhors the gain
that is not honestly come by.
(4.) If he have a bribe at any time thrust into his hand, to pervert
justice, he shakes his hands from holding it, with the utmost
detestation, taking it as an affront to have it offered him.
(5.) He stops his ears from hearing any thing that tends to
cruelty or bloodshed, or any suggestions stirring him up to revenge,
Job 31:31.
He turns a deaf ear to those that delight in war and entice him to
cast in his lot among them,
Proverbs 1:14,16.
(6.) He shuts his eyes from seeing evil. He has such an
abhorrence of sin that he cannot bear to see others commit it, and does
himself watch against all the occasions of it. Those that would
preserve the purity of their souls must keep a strict guard upon the
senses of their bodies, must stop their ears to temptations, and turn
away their eyes from beholding vanity.
2. The good man's comfort, which he may preserve even in times of
common calamity,
Isaiah 33:16.
(1.) He shall be safe; he shall escape the devouring fire and the
everlasting burnings; he shall have access to, and communion with, that
God who is a devouring fire, but shall be to him a rejoicing light.
And, as to present troubles, he shall dwell on high, out of the
reach of them, nay, out of the hearing of the noise of them; he shall
not be really harmed by them, nay, he shall not be greatly frightened
at them: The floods of great waters shall not come nigh him; or,
if they should attack him, his place of defence shall be the
munitions of rocks, strong and impregnable, fortified by nature as
well as art. The divine power will keep him safe, and his faith in that
power will keep him easy. God, the rock of ages, will be his high
tower.
(2.) He shall be supplied; he shall want nothing that is necessary for
him: Bread shall be given him, even when the siege is straitest
and provisions are cut off; and his waters shall be sure, that
is, he shall be sure of the continuance of them, so that he shall not
drink his water by measure and with astonishment. Those that fear the
Lord shall not want any thing that is good for them.
III. He will protect Jerusalem, and deliver it out of the hands of the
invaders. This storm that threatened them should blow over, and they
should enjoy a prosperous state again. Many instances are here given of
this prosperity.
1. Hezekiah shall put off his sackcloth and all the sadness of his
countenance, and shall appear publicly in his beauty, in his royal
robes and with a pleasing aspect
(Isaiah 33:17),
to the great joy of all his loving subjects. Those that walk uprightly
shall not only have bread given them, and their water sure, but they
shall with an eye of faith see the King of kings in his beauty, the
beauty of holiness, and that beauty shall be upon them.
2. The siege being raised, by which they were kept close within the
walls of Jerusalem, they shall now be at liberty to go abroad upon
business or pleasure without danger of falling into the enemies' hand:
They shall behold the land that is very far off; they shall
visit the utmost corners of the nation, and take a prospect of the
adjacent countries, which will be the more pleasant after so long a
confinement. Thus believers behold the heavenly Canaan, that land that
is very far off, and comfort themselves with the prospect of it in evil
times.
3. The remembrance of the fright they were in shall add to the pleasure
of their deliverance
(Isaiah 33:18):
Thy heart shall meditate terror, meditate it with pleasure when
it is over. Thou shalt think thou still hearest the alarm in thy ears,
when all the cry was, "Arm, arm, arm! every man to his post. Where
is the scribe or secretary of war? Let him appear to draw up the
muster-roll. Where is the receiver and pay-master of the army?
Let him see what he had in bank, to defray the charge of a defence.
Where is he that counted the towers? Let him bring in the
account of them, that care may be taken to put a competent number of
men in each." Or these words may be taken as Jerusalem's triumph over
the vanquished army of the Assyrians, and the rather because the
apostle alludes to them in his triumphs over the learning of this
world, when it was baffled by the gospel of Christ,
1 Corinthians 1:20.
The virgin, the daughter of Zion, despises all their military
preparations. Where is the scribe or muster-master of the Assyrian
army? Where is their weigher (or treasurer), and where are their
engineers that counted the towers? They are all either dead or fled.
There is an end of them.
4. They shall no more be terrified with the sight of the Assyrians, who
were a fierce people naturally, and were particularly fierce against
the people of the Jews, and were of a strange language, that could
understand neither their petitions nor their complaints, and therefore
had a pretence for being deaf to them, nor could themselves be
understood: "They are of a deeper speech than thou canst
perceive, which will make them the more formidable,
Isaiah 33:19.
Thy eyes shall no more see them thus fierce, but their countenances
changed when they shall all become dead corpses."
5. They shall no more be under apprehensions of the danger of
Jerusalem-Zion, and the temple there
(Isaiah 33:20):
"Look upon Zion, the city of our solemnities, the city where our
solemn sacred feasts are kept, where we used to meet to worship God in
religious assemblies." The good people among them, in the time of their
distress, were most in pain for Zion upon this account, that it was the
city of their solemnities, that the conquerors would burn their temple
and they should not have that to keep their solemn feasts in any more.
In times of public danger our concern should be most about our
religion, and the cities of our solemnities should be dearer to us than
either our strong cities or our store-cities. It is with an eye to this
that God will work deliverance for Jerusalem, because it is the city of
religious solemnities: let those be conscientiously kept up, as the
glory of a people, and we may depend upon God to create a defence upon
that glory. Two things are here promised to Jerusalem:--
(1.) A well-grounded security. It shall be a quiet habitation
for the people of God; they shall not be molested and disturbed, as
they have been, by the alarms of the sword either of war or
persecution,
Isaiah 29:20.
It shall be a quiet habitation, as it is the city of our solemnities.
It is desirable to be quiet in our own houses, but much more so to be
quiet in God's house and have none to make us afraid there. Thus it
shall be with Jerusalem; and the eyes shall see it, which will
be a great satisfaction to a good man,
Psalms 128:5,6.
"Thou shalt see the good of Jerusalem, and peace upon Israel;
thou shalt live to see it and share in it."
(2.) An unmoved stability. Jerusalem, the city of our solemnities, is
indeed but a tabernacle, in comparison with the New Jerusalem.
The present manifestations of the divine glory and grace are nothing in
comparison with those that are reserved for the future state. But it is
such a tabernacle as shall not be taken down. After this trouble
is over Jerusalem shall long enjoy a confirmed peace; and her sacred
privileges, which are the stakes and cords of her tabernacle, shall not
be removed from her, nor any disturbance given to the course and circle
of her religious services. God's church on earth is a tabernacle,
which, though it may be shifted from one place to another, shall not be
taken down while the world stands; for in every age Christ will have a
seed to serve him. The promises of the covenant are its stakes, which
shall never be removed, and the ordinances and institutions of the
gospel are its cords, which shall never be broken. They are things
which cannot be shaken, though heaven and earth be, but shall
remain.
6. God himself will be their protector and Saviour,
Isaiah 33:21,22.
This the principal ground of their confidence: "He that is himself
the glorious Lord will display his glory for us and be a glory
to us, such as shall eclipse the rival-glory of the enemy." God, in
being a gracious Lord, is a glorious Lord; for his goodness is his
glory. God will be the Saviour of Jerusalem and her glorious Lord,
(1.) As a guard against their adversaries abroad. He will be a place
of broad rivers and streams. Jerusalem had no considerable river
running by it, as most great cities have, nothing but the brook Kidron,
and so wanted one of the best natural fortifications, as well as one of
the greatest advantages for trade and commerce, and upon this account
their enemies despised them and doubted not but to make an easy prey of
them; but the presence and power of God are sufficient at any time to
make up to us the deficiencies of the creature and of its strength and
beauty. We have all in God, all we need or can desire. Many external
advantages Jerusalem has not which other places have, but in God there
is more than an equivalent. But, if there be broad rivers and streams
about Jerusalem, may not these yield an easy access to the fleet of an
invader? No; these are rivers and streams in which shall go no
galley with oars, no man of war or gallant ship. If God himself be
the river, it must needs be inaccessible to the enemy; they can neither
find nor force their way by it.
(2.) As a guide to their affairs at home: "For the Lord is our
Judge, to whom we are accountable, to whose judgment we refer
ourselves, by whose judgment we abide, and who therefore (we hope) will
judge for us. He is our lawgiver; his word is a law to us, and
to him every thought within us is brought into obedience. He is our
King, to whom we pay homage and tribute, and an inviolable
allegiance, and therefore he will save us." For, as protection
draws allegiance, so allegiance may expect protection, and shall have
it with God. By faith we take Christ for our prince and Saviour, and as
such depend upon him and devote ourselves to him. Observe with what an
air of triumph, and with what an emphasis laid upon the glorious name
of God, they comfort themselves with this: Jehovah is our Judge,
Jehovah is our Lawgiver, Jehovah is our King, who, being self-existent,
is self-sufficient, and all-sufficient to us.
7. The enemies shall be quite infatuated, and all their powers and
projects broken, like a ship at sea in stress of weather, that cannot
ride out the storm, but having her tackle torn, her masts split, and
nothing wherewith to repair them, is given up for a wreck,
Isaiah 33:23.
The tacklings of the Assyrian are loosed; they are like a
ship whose tacklings are loose, or forsaken by the ship's crew, when
they give it over for lost, finding that they cannot strengthen the
mast, but it will come down. They thought themselves sure of Jerusalem;
but when they were just entering the port as it were, and though all
was their own, they were quite becalmed, and could not spread their
sail, but lay wind-bound till God poured the fury of his wrath upon
them. The enemies of God's church are often disarmed and unrigged when
they think they have almost gained their point.
8. The wealth of their camp shall be a rich booty for the Jews: Then
is the prey of a great spoil divided. When the greater part were
slain the rest fled in confusion, and with such precipitation that
(like the Syrians) they left their tents as they were, so that
all the treasure in them fell into the hands of the besieged; and even
the lame take the prey. Those that tarried at home did divide
the spoil. It was so easy to come at that not only the strong man might
make himself master of it, but even the lame man, whose hands were
lame, that he could not fight, and his feet, that he could not pursue.
As the victory shall cost them no peril, so the prey shall cost them no
toil. And there was such abundance of it that when those who were
forward, and came first, had carried off as much as they would, even
the lame, who came late, found sufficient. Thus God brought good out of
evil, and not only delivered Jerusalem, but enriched it, and abundantly
recompensed the losses they had sustained. Thus comfortably and well do
the frights and distresses of the people of God often end.
9. Both sickness and sin shall be taken away; and then sickness is
taken away in mercy when this is all the fruit of it, and the recovery
from it, even the taking away of sin.
(1.) The inhabitant shall not say, I am sick. As the lame shall take
the prey, so shall the sick, notwithstanding their weakness, make a
shift to get to the abandoned camp and seize something for themselves;
or there shall be such a universal transport of joy upon this occasion
that even the sick shall, for the present, forget their sickness and
the sorrows of it, and join with the public in its rejoicings; the
deliverance of their city shall be their cure. Or it intimates that,
whereas infectious diseases are commonly the effect of long sieges, it
shall not be so with Jerusalem, but the inhabitants of it with their
victory and peace shall have health also, and there shall be no
complaining upon the account of sickness within their gates. Or those
that are sick shall bear their sickness without complaining as long as
they see it goes well with Jerusalem. Our sense of private grievances
should be drowned in our thanksgivings for public mercies.
(2.) The people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their
iniquity, not only the body of the nation forgiven their national
guilt in the removing of the national judgment, but particular persons,
that dwell therein, shall repent, and reform, and have their sins
pardoned. And this is promised as that which is at the bottom of all
other favours; he will do so and so for them, for he will be
merciful to their unrighteousness,
Hebrews 8:12.
Sin is the sickness of the soul. When God pardons the sin he heals the
disease; and, when the diseases of sin are healed by pardoning mercy,
the sting of bodily sickness is taken out and the cause of it removed;
so that either the inhabitant shall not be sick or at least shall not
say, I am sick. If iniquity be taken away, we have little reason
to complain of outward affliction. Son, be of good cheer; thy sins
are forgiven thee.
Matthew Henry "Verse by Verse Commentary for 'Isaiah' Matthew Henry Bible Commentary".
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