God, having in the foregoing chapter reckoned with the Babylonians, and
shown them their sins and the desolation that was coming upon them for
their sins, to show that he hates sin wherever he finds it and will not
connive at it in his own people, comes, in this chapter, to show the
house of Jacob their sins, but, withal, the mercy God had in store for
them notwithstanding; and he therefore sets their sins in order before
them, that by their repentance and reformation they might be prepared
for that mercy.
I. He charges them with hypocrisy in that which is good and obstinacy
in that which is evil, especially in their idolatry, notwithstanding
the many convincing proofs God had given them that he is God alone,
Isaiah 47:1-8.
II. He assures them that their deliverance would be wrought purely for
the sake of God's own name and not for any merit of theirs,
Isaiah 47:9-11.
III. He encourages them to depend purely upon God's power and promise
for this deliverance,
Isaiah 47:12-15.
IV. He shows them that, as it was by their own sin that they brought
themselves into captivity, so it would be only by the grace of God that
they would obtain the necessary preparatives for their enlargement,
Isaiah 47:16-19.
V. He proclaims their release, yet with a proviso that the wicked shall
have no benefit by it,
Isaiah 47:20-22.
God's Expostulation with His People.
B. C. 708.
1 Hear ye this, O house of Jacob, which are called by the name
of Israel, and are come forth out of the waters of Judah, which
swear by the name of the LORD, and make mention of the God of
Israel, but not in truth, nor in righteousness.
2 For they call themselves of the holy city, and stay
themselves upon the God of Israel; The LORD of hosts is his
name.
3 I have declared the former things from the beginning; and
they went forth out of my mouth, and I showed them; I did them
suddenly, and they came to pass.
4 Because I knew that thou art obstinate, and thy neck is
an iron sinew, and thy brow brass;
5 I have even from the beginning declared it to thee; before
it came to pass I showed it thee: lest thou shouldest say, Mine
idol hath done them, and my graven image, and my molten image,
hath commanded them.
6 Thou hast heard, see all this; and will not ye declare it?
I have showed thee new things from this time, even hidden things,
and thou didst not know them.
7 They are created now, and not from the beginning; even before
the day when thou heardest them not; lest thou shouldest say,
Behold, I knew them.
8 Yea, thou heardest not; yea, thou knewest not; yea, from that
time that thine ear was not opened: for I knew that thou
wouldest deal very treacherously, and wast called a transgressor
from the womb.
We may observe here,
I. The hypocritical profession which many of the Jews made of religion
and relation to God. To those who made such a profession the prophet is
here ordered to address himself, for their conviction and humiliation,
that they might own God's justice in what he had brought upon them. Now
observe here,
1. How high their profession of religion soared, what a fair show they
made in the flesh and how far they went towards heaven, what a good
livery they wore and what a good face they put upon a very bad heart.
(1.) They were the house of Jacob; they had a place and a name
in the visible church. Jacob have I loved. Jacob is God's
chosen; and they are not only retainers to his family, but descendants
from him.
(2.) They were called by the name of Israel, an honourable name;
they were of that people to whom pertained both the giving of the law
and the promises. Israel signifies a prince with God; and
they prided themselves in being of that princely race.
(3.) They came forth out of the waters of Judah, and thence were
called Jews; they were of the royal tribe, the tribe of which
Shiloh was to come, the tribe that adhered to God when the rest
revolted.
(4.) They swore by the name of the Lord, and thereby owned him
to be the true God, and their God, and gave glory to him as the
righteous Judge of all. They swore to the name of the Lord (so
it may be read); they took an oath of allegiance to him as their King
and joined themselves to him in covenant.
(5.) They made mention of the God of Israel in their prayers and
praises; they often spoke of him, observed his memorials, and pretended
to be very mindful of him.
(6.) They called themselves of the holy city, and, when they
were captives in Babylon, purely from a principle of honour, and
jealousy for their native country, they valued themselves upon their
interest in it. Many, who are themselves unholy, are proud of their
relation to the church, the holy city.
(7.) They stayed themselves upon the God of Israel, and boasted
of his promises and his covenant with them; they leaned on the
Lord,
Micah 3:11.
And, if they were asked concerning their God, they could say, "The
Lord of hosts is his name, the Lord of all;" happy are we
therefore, and very great, who have relation to him!
2. How low their profession of religion sunk, notwithstanding all this.
It was all in vain; for it was all a jest; it was not in truth and
righteousness. Their hearts were not true nor right in these
professions. Note, All our religious professions avail nothing further
than they are made in truth and righteousness. If we be not sincere in
them, we do but take the name of the Lord our God in vain.
II. The means God used, and the method he took, to keep them close to
himself, and to prevent their turning aside to idolatry. The many
excellent laws he gave them, with their sanctions, and the hedges about
them, it seems, would not serve to restrain them from that sin which
did most easily beset them, and therefore to those God added remarkable
prophecies, and remarkable providences in pursuance of those
prophecies, which were all designed to convince them that their God was
the only true God and that it was therefore both their duty and
interest to adhere to him.
1. He both dignified and favoured them with remarkable prophecies
(Isaiah 48:3):
I have declared the former things from the beginning. Nothing
material happened to their nation from its original which was not
prophesied of before--their bondage in Egypt, their deliverance thence,
the situation of their tribes in Canaan, &c. All these things went
forth out of God's mouth and he showed them. Herein they were
honoured above any nation, and even their curiosity was gratified.
Their prophecies were such as they could rely upon, and such as
concerned themselves and their own nation; and they were all verified
by the accomplishment of them. I did them suddenly, when they
were least expected by themselves or others, and therefore could not be
foreseen by any but a divine prescience. I did them and they came
to pass; for what God does he does effectually. The very calamities
they were now groaning under in Babylon God did from the beginning
declare to them by Moses, as the certain consequences of their apostasy
from God,
Deut. xxviii. 36, &c.; xxix. 28.
He also declared to them their return to God, and to their own land
again,
Deuteronomy 30:4,Le+26:44,45.
Thus he showed them how he would deal with them long before it came to
pass. Let them compare their present state together with the
deliverance they had now in prospect with what was written in the law,
and they would find the scripture exactly fulfilled.
2. He both dignified and favoured them with remarkable providence
(Isaiah 48:6):
I have shown thee new things from this time. Besides the general
view given from the beginning of God's proceedings with them, he showed
them new things by the prophets of their own day, and created them.
They were hidden things, which they could not otherwise know, as
the prophecy concerning Cyrus and the exact time of their release out
of Babylon. These things God created now,
Isaiah 48:7.
Their restoration was in effect their creation, and they had a promise
of it not from the beginning, but of late; for to prevent their
apostasy from God, or to recover them, prophecy was kept up among them.
Yet it was told them when they could not come to the knowledge of it in
any other way than by divine revelation. "Consider," says God, "how
much soever it is talked of now among you and expected, it was told you
by the prophets, when it was the furthest thing from your thoughts,
when you had not heard it, when you had not known it, nor had any
reason to expect it, and when your ear was not opened concerning it
(Isaiah 48:7,8),
when the thing seemed utterly impossible, and you would scarcely have
given any one the hearing who should have told you of it." God had
shown them hidden things which were out of the reach of their
knowledge, and done for them great things, out of the reach of their
power: "Now," says he
(Isaiah 48:6),
"thou hast heard; see all this. Thou hast heard the prophecy;
see the accomplishment of it, and observe whether the word and works of
God do not exactly agree; and will you not declare it, that as
you have heard so you have seen? Will you not own that the Lord is the
true God, the only true God, that he has the knowledge and power which
no creature has and which none of the gods of the nations can pretend
to? Will you not own that your God has been a good God to you? Declare
this to his honour, and your own shame, who have dealt so deceitfully
with him and preferred others before him."
III. The reasons why God would take this method with them.
1. Because he would anticipate their boastings of themselves and their
idols.
(1.) God by his prophets told them beforehand of their deliverance,
lest they should attribute the accomplishment of it to their idols.
Thus he saw it necessary to secure the glory of it to himself, which
otherwise would have been given by some of them to their graven images:
"I spoke of it," says God, "lest thou shouldst say, My idol has done
it or has commanded it to be done,"
Isaiah 48:5.
There were those that would be apt to say so, and so would be confirmed
in their idolatry by that which was intended to cure them of it. But
they would now be for ever precluded from saying this; for, if the
idols had done it, the prophets of the idols would have foretold it;
but, the prophets of the Lord having foretold it, it was no doubt the
power of the Lord that effected it.
(2.) God foretold it by his prophets, lest they should assume the
foresight of it to themselves. Those that were not so profane as to
have ascribed the thing itself to an idol were yet so proud as to have
pretended that by their own sagacity they foresaw it, if God had not
been beforehand with them and spoken first: Lest thou shouldst say,
Behold, I knew them,
Isaiah 48:7.
Thus vain men, who would be thought wise, commonly undervalue a thing
which is really great and surprising with this suggestion, that it was
no more than they expected and they knew it would come to this. To
anticipate this, and that this boasting might for ever be excluded, God
told them of it before the day, when as yet they dreamed not of it. God
has said and done enough to prevent men's boastings of themselves, and
that no flesh may glory in his presence, and, if it have not the
intended effect, it will aggravate the sin and ruin of the proud; and,
sooner, or later, every mouth shall be stopped, and all flesh shall
become silent before God.
2. Because he would leave them inexcusable in their obstinacy.
Therefore he took this pains with them, because he knew they
were obstinate,
Isaiah 48:4.
He knew they were so obstinate and perverse that, if he had not
supported the doctrine of providence by prophecy, they would have had
the impudence to deny it, and would have said that their idol had done
that which God did. He knew very well,
(1.) How wilful they would be, and how fully bent they would be upon
that which is evil: I knew that thou wast hard; so the word is.
There were prophecies as well as precepts which God gave them because
of the hardness of their hearts: "Thy neck is an iron sinew,
unapt to yield and submit to the yoke of God' commandments, unapt to
turn and look back upon his dealings with thee or look up to his
displeasure against thee; not flexible to the will of God, nor pliable
to his intentions, nor manageable by his word or providence. Thy
brow is brass; thou art impudent and canst not blush, insolent and
wilt not fear or give back, but wilt thrust on in the way of thy
heart." God uses means to bring sinners to comply with him, though he
knows they are obstinate.
(2.) How deceitful they would be and how insincere in that which is
good,
Isaiah 48:8.
God sent his prophets to them, but they did not hear, they would not
know, and it was no more than was expected, considering what they had
been. Thou wast called, and not miscalled, a transgressor
from the womb. Ever since they were first formed into a people they
were prone to idolatry; they brought with them out of Egypt a strange
addictedness to that sin; and they were murmurers as soon as ever they
began their march to Canaan. They were justly upbraided with it then,
Deuteronomy 9:7,24.
Therefore I knew that thou wouldst deal very treacherously. God
foresaw their apostasy, and gave this reason for it, that he had always
found them false and fickle,
Deuteronomy 31:16,27,29.
This is applicable to particular persons. We are all born children of
disobedience; we were called transgressors from the womb, and
therefore it is easy to foresee that we shall deal treacherously, very
treacherously. Where original sin is actual sin will follow of course.
God knows it, and yet deals not with us according to our deserts.
Encouragement to God's People.
B. C. 708.
9 For my name's sake will I defer mine anger, and for my praise
will I refrain for thee, that I cut thee not off.
10 Behold, I have refined thee, but not with silver; I have
chosen thee in the furnace of affliction.
11 For mine own sake, even for mine own sake, will I do it:
for how should my name be polluted? and I will not give my
glory unto another.
12 Hearken unto me, O Jacob and Israel, my called; I am he; I
am the first, I also am the last.
13 Mine hand also hath laid the foundation of the earth, and my
right hand hath spanned the heavens: when I call unto them,
they stand up together.
14 All ye, assemble yourselves, and hear; which among them hath
declared these things? The LORD hath loved him: he will do his
pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall be on the Chaldeans.
15 I, even I, have spoken; yea, I have called him: I have
brought him, and he shall make his way prosperous.
The deliverance of God's people out of their captivity in Babylon was a
thing upon many accounts so improbable that there was need of line upon
line for the encouragement of the faith and hope of God's people
concerning it. Two things were discouraging to them--their own
unworthiness that God should do it for them and the many difficulties
in the thing itself; now, in these verses, both these discouragements
are removed, for here is,
I. A reason why God would do it for them, though they were unworthy;
not for their sake, be it known to them, but for his name's sake,
for his own sake,
Isaiah 48:9-11.
1. It is true they had been very provoking, and God had been justly
angry with them. Their captivity was the punishment of their iniquity;
and if, when he had them in Babylon, he had left them to pine away and
perish there, and made the desolations of their country perpetual, he
would only have dealt with them according to their sins, and it was
what such a sinful people might expect from an angry God. "But," says
God, "I will defer my anger" (or, rather, stifle and suppress
it); "I will make it appear that I am slow to wrath, and will
refrain from thee, not pour upon thee what I justly might, that I
should cut thee off from being a people." And why will God thus stay
his hand? For my name's sake; because this people was called by
his name, and made profession of his name, and, if they were cut off,
the enemies would blaspheme his name. It is for my praise;
because it would redound to the honour of his mercy to spare and
reprieve them, and, if he continued them to be to him a people, they
might be to him for a name and a praise.
1. It is true they were very corrupt and ill-disposed, but God would
himself refine them, and make them fit for the mercy he intended for
them: "I have refined thee, that thou mightest be made a vessel
of honour." Though he does not find them meet for his favour, he will
make them so. And this accounts for his bringing them into the trouble,
and continuing them in it so long as he did. It was not to cut them
off, but to do them good. It was to refine them, but not as
silver, or with silver, not so thoroughly as men refine
their silver, which they continue in the furnace till all the dross is
separated from it; if God should take that course with them, they would
be always in the furnace, for they are all dross, and, as such, might
justly be put away
(Psalms 119:119)
as reprobate silver,
Jeremiah 6:30.
He therefore takes them as they are, refined in part only, and not
thoroughly. "I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction,
that is, I have made thee a choice one by the good which the affliction
has done thee, and then designed thee for great things." Many have been
brought home to God as chosen vessels and a good work of grace has been
begun in them in the furnace of affliction. Affliction is no bar to
God's choice, but subservient to his purpose.
3. It is true they could not pretend to merit at God's hand so great a
favour as their deliverance out of Babylon, which would put such an
honour upon them and bring them so much joy; therefore, says God,
For my own sake, even for my own sake, will I do it,
Isaiah 48:11.
See how the emphasis is laid upon that; for it is a reason that cannot
fail, and therefore the resolution grounded upon it cannot fall to the
ground. God will do it, not because he owes them such a favour, but to
save the honour of his own name, that that may not be polluted by the
insolent triumphs of the heathen, who, in triumphing over Israel,
thought they triumphed over the God of Israel and imagined their gods
too hard for him. This was plainly the language of Belshazzar's revels,
when he profaned the holy vessels of God's temple at the same time that
he praised his idols
(Daniel 5:2,4),
and of the Babylonians' demand
(Psalms 137:3),
Sing us one of the songs of Zion. God will therefore
deliver his people, because he will not suffer his glory to be thus
given to another. Moses pleaded this often with God: Lord, what will
the Egyptians say? Note, God is jealous for the honour of his own
name, and will not suffer the wrath of man to proceed any further than
he will make it turn to his praise. And it is matter of comfort to
God's people that, whatever becomes of them, God will secure his own
honour; and, as far as is necessary to that, God will work deliverance
for them.
II. Here is a proof that God could do it for them, though they were
unable to help themselves and the thing seemed altogether
impracticable. Let Jacob and Israel hearken to this, and believe it,
and take the comfort of it. They are God's called, called according
to his purpose, called by him out of Egypt
(Hosea 11:1)
and now out of Babylon, a people whom with a distinguishing favour he
calls by name, and to whom he calls. They are his called, for they are
called to him, called by his name, and called his; and therefore he
will look after them, and they may be assured that, as he will deliver
them for his own sake, so he will deliver them by his own strength.
They need not fear them, for,
1. He is God alone, and the eternal God
(Isaiah 48:12):
"I am he who can do what I will and will do what is best, he
whom none can compare with, much less contend with. I am the first;
I also am the last." Who can be too quick for him that is the
first, or anticipate him? Who can be too hard for him that is the last,
and will keep the field against all opposers, and will reign till they
are all made his footstool? What room then is left to doubt of their
deliverance when he undertakes it whose designs cannot but be
well laid, for he is the first, and well executed, for he is the last.
As for this God, his work is perfect.
2. He is the God that made the world, and he that did that can do any
thing,
Isaiah 48:13.
Look we down? We see the earth firm under us, and feel it so; it was
his hand that laid the foundation of it. Look we up? We see the
heavens spread out as a canopy over our heads, and it was his hand that
spread them, that spanned them, that stretched them out, and did
it by an exact measure, as the workman sometimes metes out his work by
spans. This intimates that God has a vast reach and can compass
designs of the greatest extent. If the palm of his right hand
(so the margin reads it) has gone so far as to stretch out the heavens,
what will he do with his outstretched arm? Yet this is not all: he has
not only made the heavens and the earth, and therefore he in whom our
hope and help is omnipotent
(Psalms 124:8),
but he has the command of all the hosts of both; when he calls them
into his service, to go on his errands, they stand up together, they
come at the call, they answer to their names: "Here we are; what wilt
thou have us to do?" They stand up, not only in reverence to their
Creator, but in a readiness to execute his orders: They stand up
together, unanimously concurring, and helping one another in the
service of their Maker. If God therefore will deliver his people, he
cannot be at a loss for instruments to be employed in effecting their
deliverance.
3. He has already foretold it, and, having infinite knowledge, so that
he foresaw it, no doubt he has almighty power to effect it: "All
you of the house of Jacob, assemble yourselves, and hear
this for your comfort, Which among them, among the gods of the
heathen, or their wise men, has declared these things, or could
declare them?"
Isaiah 48:14.
They had no foresight of them at all, but those who consulted them were
very confident that Babylon should be a lady for ever and Israel
perpetual slave; and their oracles did not give them the least hint to
the contrary, to undeceive them; whereas God by his prophets had given
notice to the Jews, long before, of their captivity and the destruction
of Jerusalem, as he had now likewise given them notice of their release
(Isaiah 48:15):
I, even I, have spoken; and he would not have spoken it if he
could not have made it good: none could out-see him, and therefore we
may be sure that none could outdo him.
4. The person is pitched upon who is to be employed in this service,
and the measures are concerted in the divine counsels, which are
unalterable. Cyrus is the man who must do it; and it tends much to
strengthen our assurance that a thing shall be done when we are
particularly informed how and by whom. It is not left at uncertainty
who shall do it, but the matter is fixed.
(1.) It is one whom God is well pleased in, upon this account, because
he is designed for this service: The Lord has loved him
(Isaiah 48:14);
he has done him this favour, this honour, to make him an instrument in
the redemption of his people and therein a type of the great Redeemer,
God's beloved Son, in whom he was well pleased. Those God does a
great kindness to, and has a great kindness for, whom he makes
serviceable to his church.
(2.) It is one to whom God will give authority and commission: I
have called him, have given him a sufficient warrant, and therefore
will bear him out.
(3.) It is one whom God will by a series of providences lead to this
service: "I have brought him from a far country, brought him to
engage against Babylon, brought him step by step, quite beyond his own
intentions." Whom God calls he will bring, will cause them to
come (so the word is), to come at the call.
(4.) It is one whom God will own and give success to. Cyrus will do
God's pleasure on Babylon, that which it is his pleasure should be
done and which he will be pleased with the doing of, though Cyrus has
ends of his own to serve and has no regard either to the will of God or
to his favour in the doing of it. His arm (Cyrus's army, and in
it God's arm) shall come, and be upon the Chaldeans, to
bring them down
(Isaiah 48:14);
for, if God call him and bring him, he will certainly make his way
prosperous,
Isaiah 48:15.
Then we may hope to prosper in our way when we follow a divine
call and guidance.
Encouragement to God's People.
B. C. 708.
16 Come ye near unto me, hear ye this; I have not spoken in
secret from the beginning; from the time that it was, there am
I: and now the Lord GOD, and his Spirit, hath sent me.
17 Thus saith the LORD, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; I
am the LORD thy God which teacheth thee to profit, which
leadeth thee by the way that thou shouldest go.
18 O that thou hadst hearkened to my commandments! then had thy
peace been as a river, and thy righteousness as the waves of the
sea:
19 Thy seed also had been as the sand, and the offspring of thy
bowels like the gravel thereof; his name should not have been cut
off nor destroyed from before me.
20 Go ye forth of Babylon, flee ye from the Chaldeans, with a
voice of singing declare ye, tell this, utter it even to the
end of the earth; say ye, The LORD hath redeemed his servant
Jacob.
21 And they thirsted not when he led them through the
deserts: he caused the waters to flow out of the rock for them:
he clave the rock also, and the waters gushed out.
22 There is no peace, saith the LORD, unto the wicked.
Here, as before, Jacob and Israel are summoned to hearken to the
prophet speaking in God's name, or rather to God speaking in and by the
prophet, and that as a type of the great prophet by whom God has in
these last days spoken unto us, and that is sufficient: Come
near therefore, and hear this. Note, Those that would hear
and understand what God says must come near, and approach to him; let
them come as near as they can. Let those that have hearkened to the
tempter now come near, and hear this, that they may be confirmed in
their resolutions to serve God. Those that draw nigh to God may depend
upon this, that his secret shall be with them. Here,
I. God refers them to what he hath both said to them and done for them
formerly, which if they would reflect upon, they might thence fetch
great encouragement to trust in God at this time.
1. He had always spoken plainly to them from the beginning, by
Moses and all the prophets: I have not spoken in secret, but
publicly, from the top of Mount Sinai, and in the chief places of
concourse, the solemn assemblies of their tribes; he did not deliver
his oracles obscurely and ambiguously, but so that they might be
understood,
Habakkuk 2:2.
2. He had always acted wonderfully for them: "From the time that
they were first formed into a people there I am, there have I
been resident among them and presiding in their affairs (he sent them
prophets, raised them up judges, and frequently appeared for them), and
therefore there I will be still." He that has been with his people
hitherto will be to the end.
II. The prophet himself, as a type of the great prophet, asserts his
own commission to deliver this message: Now the Lord God (the
same that spoke from the beginning and did not speak in secret) has
by his Spirit sent me,
Isaiah 48:16.
The Spirit of God is here spoken of as a person distinct from the
Father and the Son, and having a divine authority to send prophets.
Note, Whom God sends the Spirit sends. Those whom God commissions for
any service the Spirit in some measure qualifies for it; and those may
speak boldly, and must be heard obediently, whom God and his Spirit
send. As that which the prophet says to the same purport with this
(Isaiah 61:1)
is applied to Christ
(Luke 4:21),
so may this be; the Lord God sent him, and he had the Spirit without
measure.
III. God by the prophet sends them a gracious message for their support
and comfort under their affliction. The preface to this message is both
awful and encouraging
(Isaiah 48:17):
Thus saith Jehovah, the eternal God, thy Redeemer, that
has often been so, that has engaged to be so, and will be faithful to
the engagement, for he is the Holy One, that cannot deceive,
the Holy One of Israel, that will not deceive them. The same
words that introduce the law, and give authority to that, introduce the
promise, and give validity to that: "I am the Lord thy God, whom
thou mayest depend upon as in relation to thee and in covenant with
thee."
1. Here is the good work which God undertakes to fulfil in them. He
that is their Redeemer, in order to that, will be,
(1.) Their instructor: "I am thy God that teaches thee to
profit, that is, teaches thee such things as are profitable for
thee, things that belong to thy peace." By this God shows
himself to be a God in covenant with us, by his teaching us
(Hebrews 8:10,11);
and none teaches like him, for he gives an understanding. Whom God
redeems he teaches; whom he designs to deliver out of their afflictions
he first teaches to profit by their afflictions, makes them partakers
of his holiness, for that is the profit for which he chastens
us,
Hebrews 12:10.
(2.) Their guide: He leads them to the way and in the way by
which they should go. He not only enlightens their eyes, but
directs their steps. By his grace he leads them in the way of duty, by
his providence he leads them in the way of deliverance. Happy are those
that are under such a guidance!
2. Here is the good-will which God declares he had for them by his good
wishes concerning them,
Isaiah 48:18,19.
He had indeed brought them into captivity, but it was owing to
themselves, nor did he afflict them willingly.
(1.) As when he gave them his law he earnestly wished they might be
obedient (O that there were such a heart in them!
Deuteronomy 5:29.
O that they were wise!
Deuteronomy 32:29),
so, when he had punished them for the breach of his law, he wished they
had been obedient: O that thou hadst hearkened to my
commandments!
Isaiah 48:18.
O that my people had hearkened unto me!
Psalms 81:13.
This confirms what God had said and sworn, that he has no pleasure
in the death of sinners.
(2.) He assures them that, if they had been obedient, that would not
only have prevented their captivity, but would have advanced and
perpetuated their prosperity. He had abundance of good things ready to
bestow upon them if their sins had not turned them away,
Isaiah 59:1,2.
[1.] They should have been carried on in a constant uninterrupted
stream of prosperity: "Thy peace should have been as a river;
thou shouldst have enjoyed a series of mercies, one continually
following another, as the waters of a river, which always last."
Labitur, et labetur in omne volubilis ævum--It flows, and will
for ever flow; not like the waters of a land-flood, which are soon
gone.
[2.] Their virtue and honour, and the justice of their cause, should in
all cases have borne down opposition by their own strength, as the
waves of the sea. Such should their righteousness have been that
nothing should have stood before it; whereas, now they had been
disobedient, the current of their prosperity was interrupted, and their
righteousness overpowered.
[3.] The rising generation should have been very numerous and very
prosperous; whereas they were now very few, as appears by the small
number of the returning captives
(Ezra 2:64),
not so many as of one tribe when they came out of Egypt. They should
have been numberless as the sand, according to the promise
(Genesis 22:17),
which they had forfeited the benefit of: "The offspring of thy
bowels would have been innumerable, like the gravel of the
sea, if thy righteousness had been irresistible and unconquerable
as the waves of the sea."
[4.] The honour of Israel should still have been unstained, untouched:
His name should not have been cut off, as now it is in the land
of Israel, which is either desolate or inhabited by strangers; nor
should it have been destroyed from before God. We cannot reckon
the name either of a family or of a kingdom destroyed till it is
destroyed from before God, till it ceases to be a name in his holy
place. Now God tells them thus what he would have done for them if they
had persevered in their obedience, First, That they might be the
more humbled for their sins, by which they had forfeited such rich
mercies. Note, This should engage us (I might say, enrage us)
against sin, that it has not only deprived us of the good things we
have enjoyed, but prevented the good things God had in store for us. It
will make the misery of the disobedient the more intolerable to think
how happy they might have been. Secondly, That his mercy might
appear the more illustrious in working deliverance for them, though
they had forfeited it and rendered themselves unworthy of it. Nothing
but a prerogative of mercy would have saved them.
3. Here is assurance given of the great work which God designed to work
for them, even their salvation out of their captivity, when he had
accomplished his work in them.
(1.) Here is a commission granted them to leave Babylon. God
proclaimed, long before Cyrus did, that whoever would might return to
his own land
(Isaiah 48:20):
"You have a full discharge sent you: Go you forth out of
Babylon; the prison-doors are thrown open, and the trumpet sounds,
proclaiming a release." Perhaps with this word, as a means, the Spirit
of the Lord stirred up the spirits of those that did take the benefit
of Cyrus's proclamation
(Ezra 1:5):
Flee you from the Chaldeans, not with an ignominious stolen
flight, as Jacob fled from Laban, but with a holy disdain, as scorning
to stay any longer among them; flee you, not silently and sorrowfully,
but with a voice, with a voice of singing, as they fled of old out of
Egypt,
Exodus 15:1.
(2.) Here is the news of this sent to all parts: "Let it be declared;
let it be told; let it be uttered; make it to be heard by the most
remote, by the most remiss; send the tidings of it by word of mouth;
send it by writing, from city to city, from kingdom to kingdom, even to
the utmost regions, to the ends of the earth." This was a figure
of the publishing of the gospel to all the world; but that brings glad
tidings which all the world is concerned in, this only that which it is
fit all should take notice of, that they may be invited by it to
forsake their idols and come into the service of the God of Israel. Let
them all know then,
[1.] That those whom God owns for his are such as he has dearly bought
and paid for: The Lord has redeemed his servant Jacob; he has
done it formerly, when he brought them out of Egypt, and now he is
about to do it again. Jacob was God's servant, and therefore he
redeemed him; for what had other masters to do with God's servants?
Israel is God's son, therefore Pharaoh must let him go. God redeemed
Jacob, and therefore it was fit that he should be his servant
(Psalms 116:16);
the bonds God had loosed tied them the faster to him. He that redeemed
us has an unquestionable right to us.
[2.] That those whom God designs to bring home to himself he will take
care of, that they want not for the necessary expenses of their
journey. When he brought them out of Egypt, and led them through the
deserts, they thirsted not
(Isaiah 48:21),
for in all their removals the water out of the rock followed them;
thence he caused the waters to flow, and, since rock-water is
the clearest and finest, God clave the rock, and the waters gushed
out; for he can fetch in necessary supplies for his people in a way
that they think the least likely. This refers to what he did for them
when he brought them out of Egypt; when all this was literally true.
But it should now be in effect done again, in their return out of
Babylon, so well provided for should they and theirs be in their
return. God does his work as effectually by marvellous providences as
by miracles, though perhaps they are not so much taken notice of. This
is applicable to those treasures of grace laid up for us in Jesus
Christ, from which all good flows to us as the water did to Israel out
of the rock, for that rock is Christ.
(3.) Here is a caveat put in against the wicked who go on still in
their trespasses. Let not them think to have any benefit among God's
people. Though in show and profession they herd themselves among them,
let them not expect to come in sharers; no
(Isaiah 48:22),
though God's thoughts concerning the body of that people were thoughts
of peace, yet to those among them that were wicked and hated to
be reformed there is no peace, no peace with God or their own
consciences, no real good, whatever is pretended to. What have those to
do with peace who are enemies to God? Their false prophets cried Peace
to those to whom it did not belong; but God tells them that there shall
be no peace, nor any think like it, to the wicked. The quarrel sinners
have commenced with God, if not taken up in time by repentance, will be
an everlasting quarrel.
Matthew Henry "Verse by Verse Commentary for 'Isaiah' Matthew Henry Bible Commentary".
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