The greater part of this chapter is on the same subject with the
chapter before, concerning the deliverance of the Jews out of Babylon,
which yet is applicable to the great salvation Christ has wrought out
for us; but the
Isaiah 52:13-15
are on the same subject with the following chapter, concerning the
person of the Redeemer, his humiliation and exaltation. Observe,
I. The encouragement that is given to the Jews in captivity to hope
that God would deliver them in his own way and time,
Isaiah 52:1-6.
II. The great joy and rejoicing that shall be both with ministers and
people upon that occasion,
Isaiah 52:7-10.
III. The call given to those that remained in captivity to shift for
their own enlargement when liberty was proclaimed,
Isaiah 52:11,12.
IV. A short idea given here of the Messiah, which is enlarged upon in
the next chapter,
Isaiah 52:13-15.
Encouragement to Jerusalem.
B. C. 706.
1 Awake, awake; put on thy strength, O Zion; put on thy
beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the holy city: for henceforth
there shall no more come into thee the uncircumcised and the
unclean.
2 Shake thyself from the dust; arise, and sit down, O
Jerusalem: loose thyself from the bands of thy neck, O captive
daughter of Zion.
3 For thus saith the LORD, Ye have sold yourselves for nought;
and ye shall be redeemed without money.
4 For thus saith the Lord GOD, My people went down aforetime
into Egypt to sojourn there; and the Assyrian oppressed them
without cause.
5 Now therefore, what have I here, saith the LORD, that my
people is taken away for nought? they that rule over them make
them to howl, saith the LORD; and my name continually every day
is blasphemed.
6 Therefore my people shall know my name: therefore they shall
know in that day that I am he that doth speak: behold, it is
I.
Here,
I. God's people are stirred up to appear vigorous for their own
deliverance,
Isaiah 52:1,2.
They had desired that God would awake and put on his
strength,
Isaiah 51:9.
Here he calls upon them to awake and put on their
strength, to bestir themselves; let them awake from their
despondency, and pluck up their spirits, encourage themselves and one
another with the hope that all will be well yet, and no longer succumb
and sink under their burden. Let them awake from their distrust, look
above them, look about them, look into the promises, look into the
providences of God that were working for them, and let them raise their
expectations of great things from God. Let them awake from their
dullness, sluggishness, and incogitancy, and raise up their endeavours,
not to take any irregular courses for their own relief, contrary to the
law of nations concerning captives, but to use all likely means to
recommend themselves to the favour of the conqueror and make an
interest with him. God here gives them an assurance,
1. That they should be reformed by their captivity: There shall no
more come into thee the uncircumcised and the unclean
(Isaiah 52:1);
their idolatrous customs should be no more introduced, or at least not
harboured; for when by the marriage of strange wives, in Ezra's time
and Nehemiah's, the unclean crept in, they were soon by the vigilance
and zeal of the magistrates expelled again, and care was taken that
Jerusalem should be a holy city. Thus the gospel Jerusalem is purified
by the blood of Christ and the grace of God, and made indeed a holy
city.
2. That they should be relieved and rescued out of their captivity,
that the bands of their necks should be loosed, that they should not
now be any longer oppressed, nay, that they should not be any more
invaded, as they had been: There shall no more come against thee
(so it may be read) the uncircumcised and the clean. The heathen
shall not again enter into God's sanctuary and profane his temple,
Psalms 79:1.
This must be understood with a condition. If they keep close to God,
and keep in with him, God will keep off, will keep out of the enemy;
but, if they again corrupt themselves, Antiochus will profane their
temple and the Romans will destroy it. However, for some time they
shall have peace. And to this happy change, now approaching, they are
here called to accommodate themselves.
(1.) Let them prepare for joy: "Put on thy beautiful garments,
no longer to appear in mourning weeds and the habit of thy widowhood.
Put on a new face, a smiling countenance, now that a new and pleasant
scene begins to open." The beautiful garments were laid up then, when
the harps were hung on the willow trees; but, now there is occasion for
both, let both be resumed together. "Put on thy strength, and, in
order to that, put on thy beautiful garments, in token of triumph and
rejoicing." Note, The joy of the Lord will be our strength
(Nehemiah 8:10),
and our beautiful garments will serve for armour of proof against the
darts of temptation and trouble. And observe, Jerusalem must put on her
beautiful garments when she becomes a holy city, for the beauty of
holiness is the most amiable beauty, and the more holy we are the more
cause we have to rejoice.
(2.) Let them prepare for liberty: "Shake thyself from the dust
in which thou hast lain, and into which thy proud oppressors have
trodden thee
(Isaiah 51:23),
or into which thou hast in thy extreme sorrow rolled thyself."
Arise, and set up; so it may be read. "O Jerusalem! prepare to
get clear of all the marks of servitude thou hast been under and to
shift thy quarters: Loose thyself from the bands of thy neck; be
inspired with generous principles and resolutions to assert thy own
liberty." The gospel proclaims liberty to those who were bound with
fears and makes it their duty to take hold of their liberty. Let those
who have been weary and heavily laden under the burden of sin, finding
relief in Christ, shake themselves from the dust of their doubts and
fears and loose themselves from those bands; for, if the Son make
them free, they shall be free indeed.
II. God stirs up himself to appear jealous for the deliverance of his
people. He here pleads their cause with himself, and even stirs up
himself to come and save them, for his reasons of mercy are fetched
from himself. Several things he here considers.
1. That the Chaldeans who oppressed them never acknowledged God in the
power they gained over his people, any more than Sennacherib did, who,
when God made use of him as an instrument for the correction and
reformation of his people, meant not so,
Isaiah 10:6,7.
"You have sold yourselves for nought; you got nothing by it, nor
did I,"
Isaiah 52:3.
(God considers that when they by sin had sold themselves he himself,
who had the prior, nay, the sole, title to them, did not increase
his wealth by their price,
Psalms 44:12.
They did not so much as pay their debts to him with it; the Babylonians
gave him no thanks for them, but rather reproached and blasphemed his
name upon that account.) "And therefore they, having so long had you
for nothing, shall at last restore you for nothing: You shall be
redeemed without price," as was promised,
Isaiah 45:13.
Those that give nothing must expect to get nothing; however, God is a
debtor to no man.
2. That they had been often before in similar distress, had often
smarted for a time under the tyranny of their task-masters, and
therefore it was a pity that they should now be left always in the hand
of these oppressors
(Isaiah 52:4):
"My people went down into Egypt, in an amicable way to settle
there; but they enslaved them, and ruled them with rigour." And then
they were delivered, notwithstanding the pride, and power, and policies
of Pharaoh. And why may we not think God will deliver his people now?
At other times the Assyrian oppressed the people of God
without cause, as when the ten tribes were carried away captive
by the king of Assyria; soon afterwards Sennacherib, another Assyrian,
with a destroying army oppressed and made himself master of all the
defenced cities of Judah. The Babylonians might not unfitly be called
Assyrians, their monarchy being a branch of the Assyrians; and
they now oppressed them without cause. Though God was righteous in
delivering them into their hands, they were unrighteous in using them
as they did, and could not pretend a dominion over them as their
subjects, as Pharaoh might when they were settled in Goshen, part of
his kingdom. When we suffer by the hands of wicked and unreasonable men
it is some comfort to be able to say that as to them it is without
cause, that we have not given them any provocation,
Psalms 7:3-5,
&c.
3. That God's glory suffered by the injuries that were done to his
people
(Isaiah 52:5):
What have I here, what do I get by it, that my people are
taken away for nought? God is not worshipped as he used to be in
Jerusalem, his altar there is gone and his temple in ruins; but if, in
lieu of that, he were more and better worshipped in Babylon, either by
the captives or by the natives, it were another matter--God might be
looked upon as in some respects a gainer in his honour by it; but,
alas! it is not so.
(1.) The captives are so dispirited that they cannot praise him;
instead of this they are continually howling, which grieves him and
moves his pity; Those that rule over them make them to howl, as
the Egyptians of old made them to sigh,
Exodus 2:23.
So the Babylonians now, using them more hardly, extorted from them
louder complaints and made them to howl. This gives us no pleasing idea
of the temper the captives were now in; their complaints were not so
rational and pious as they should have been, but brutish rather; they
howled,
Hosea 7:14.
However God heard them, and came down to deliver them, as he did out of
Egypt,
Exodus 3:7,8.
(2.) The natives are so insolent that they will not praise him, but,
instead of that, they are continually blaspheming, which affronts him
and moves his anger. They boasted that they were too hard for God
because they were too hard for his people, and set him at defiance, as
unable to deliver them, and thus his name continually every day was
blasphemed among them. When they praised their own idols they
lifted up themselves against the Lord of heaven,
Daniel 5:23.
"Now," says God, "this is not to be suffered. I will go down to
deliver them; for what honour, what rent, what tribute of praise have I
from the world, when my people, who should be to me for a name and
praise, are to me for a reproach? For their oppressors will neither
praise God themselves nor let them do it." The apostle quotes this with
application to the wicked lives of the Jews, by which God was
dishonoured among the Gentiles then, as much as now he was by their
sufferings,
Romans 2:23,24.
4. That his glory would be greatly manifested by their deliverance
(Isaiah 52:6):
"Therefore, because my name is thus blasphemed, I will arise,
and my people shall know my name, my name Jehovah." By this name
he had made himself known in delivering them out of Egypt,
Exodus 6:3.
God will do something to vindicate his own honour, something for his
great name; and his people, who have almost lost the knowledge of it,
shall know it to their comfort and shall find it their strong tower.
They shall know that God's providence governs the world, and all the
affairs of it, that it is he who speaks deliverance for them by the
word of his power, that it is he who speaks deliverance for them by the
word of his power, that it is he only, who at first spoke and it was
done. They shall know that God's word, which Israel is blessed with
above other nations, shall without fail have its accomplishment in due
season, that it is he who speaks by the prophet; it is he, and they do
not speak of themselves; for not one iota or tittle of what they say
shall fall to the ground.
The Approach of the Messiah.
B. C. 706.
7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that
bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good
tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion,
Thy God reigneth!
8 Thy watchmen shall lift up the voice; with the voice together
shall they sing: for they shall see eye to eye, when the LORD
shall bring again Zion.
9 Break forth into joy, sing together, ye waste places of
Jerusalem: for the LORD hath comforted his people, he hath
redeemed Jerusalem.
10 The LORD hath made bare his holy arm in the eyes of all the
nations; and all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of
our God.
11 Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no
unclean thing; go ye out of the midst of her; be ye clean, that
bear the vessels of the LORD.
12 For ye shall not go out with haste, nor go by flight: for
the LORD will go before you; and the God of Israel will be your
rereward.
The removal of the Jews from Babylon to their own land again is here
spoken of both as a mercy and as a duty; and the application of
Isaiah 52:7
to the preaching of the gospel (by the apostle,
Romans 10:15)
plainly intimates that that deliverance was a type and figure of the
redemption of mankind by Jesus Christ, to which what is here said of
their redemption out of Babylon ought to be accommodated.
I. It is here spoken of as a great blessing, which ought to be welcomed
with abundance of joy and thankfulness.
1. Those that bring the tidings of their release shall be very
acceptable
(Isaiah 52:7):
"How beautiful upon the mountains, the mountains round about
Jerusalem, over which these messengers are seen coming at a distance,
how beautiful are their feet, when it is known what tidings they
bring!" It is not meant so much of the common posts, or the messengers
sent express by the government to disperse the proclamation, but rather
of some of the Jews themselves, who, being at the fountain-head of
intelligence, had early notice of it, and immediately went themselves,
or sent their own messengers, to all parts, to disperse the news, and
even to Jerusalem itself, to tell the few who remained there that their
brethren would be with them shortly; for it is published not merely as
matter of news, but as a proof that Zion's God reigns, for in that
language it is published: they say unto Zion, Thy God reigns.
Those who bring the tidings of peace and salvation, that Cyrus has
given orders for the release of the Jews, tidings which were so long
expected by those that waited for the consolation of Israel, those
good tidings (so the original reads it, without the tautology of
our translation, good tidings of good), put this construction
upon it, O Zion! thy God reigns. Note, When bad news is abroad
this is good news, and when good news is abroad this is the best news,
that Zion's God reigns, that God is Zion's God, in covenant with her,
and as such he reigns,
Psalms 146:10,Zec+9:9.
The Lord has founded Zion,
Isaiah 14:32.
All events have their rise in the disposals of the kingdom of his
providence and their tendency to the advancement of the kingdom of his
grace. This must be applied to the preaching of the gospel, which is a
proclamation of peace and salvation; it is gospel indeed, good news,
glad tidings, tidings of victory over our spiritual enemies and liberty
from our spiritual bondage. The good news is that the Lord Jesus reigns
and all power is given to him. Christ himself brought these tidings
first
(Luke 4:18,Heb+2:3),
and of him the text speaks: How beautiful are his feet! his feet
that were nailed to the cross, how beautiful upon Mount Calvary! his
feet when he came leaping upon the mountains
(Song of Solomon 2:8),
how beautiful were they to those who knew his voice and knew it to be
the voice of their beloved! His ministers proclaim these good tidings;
they ought to keep their feet clean from the pollutions of the world,
and then they ought to be beautiful in the eyes of those to whom they
are sent, who sit at their feet, or rather at Christ's in them, to hear
his word. They must be esteemed in love for their work's
sake
(1 Thessalonians 5:13),
for their message sake, which is well worthy of all acceptation.
2. Those to whom the tidings are brought shall be put thereby into a
transport of joy.
(1.) Zion's watchmen shall then rejoice because they are surprisingly
illuminated,
Isaiah 52:8.
The watchmen on Jerusalem's walls shall lead the chorus in this
triumph. Who they were we are told,
Isaiah 62:6.
They were such as God set on the walls of Jerusalem, to make mention of
his name, and to continue instant in prayer to him, till he again
made Jerusalem a praise in the earth. These watchmen stand upon
their watch-tower, waiting for an answer to their prayers
(Habakkuk 2:1);
and therefore when the good news comes they have it first, and the
longer they have continued and the more importunate they have been in
praying for it the more will they be elevated when it comes: They shall
lift up the voice, with the voice together shall they sing in
concert, to invite others to join with them in their praises. And that
which above all things will transport them with pleasure is that
they shall see eye to eye, that is, face to face. Whereas God
had been a God hiding himself, and they could scarcely discern any
thing of his favour through the dark cloud of their afflictions, now
that the cloud is scattered they shall plainly see it. They shall see
Zion's king eye to eye; so it was fulfilled when the Word was
made flesh and dwelt among us, and there were those that saw his
glory
(John 1:14)
and looked upon it,
1 John 1:1.
They shall see an exact agreement and correspondence between the
prophecy and the event, the promise and the performance; they shall see
how they look one upon another eye to eye, and be satisfied that the
same God spoke the one and did the other. When the Lord shall bring
again Zion out of her captivity the prophets shall thence receive and
give fuller discoveries than ever of God's good-will to his people.
Applying this also, as the
Isaiah 52:8,
to gospel times, it is a promise of the pouring out of the Spirit upon
gospel ministers, as a spirit of wisdom and revelation, to lead them
into all truth, so that they shall see eye to eye, shall see God's
grace more clearly than the Old-Testament saints could see it: and they
shall herein be unanimous; in these great things concerning the common
salvation they shall concur in their sentiments as well as their songs.
Nay, St. Paul seems to allude to this when he makes it the privilege of
our future state that we shall see face to face.
(2.) Zion's waste places shall then rejoice because they shall be
surprisingly comforted
(Isaiah 52:9):
Break forth into joy, sing together, you waste places of
Jerusalem; that is, all parts of Jerusalem, for it was all in
ruins, and even those parts that seemed to lie most desolate shall
share in the joy; and they, having little expected it, shall break
forth into joy, as men that dream,
Psalms 126:1,2.
Let them sing together. Note, Those that share in mercies ought to join
in praises. Here is matter for joy and praise.
[1.] God's people will have the comfort of this salvation; and what is
the matter of our rejoicing ought to be the matter of our thanksgiving.
He has redeemed Jerusalem (the inhabitants of Jerusalem that
were sold into the hands of their enemies) and thereby he has
comforted his people that were in sorrow. The redemption of
Jerusalem is the joy of all God's people, whose character it is that
they look for that redemption,
Luke 2:38.
[2.] God will have the glory of it,
Isaiah 52:10.
He has made bare his holy arm (manifested and displayed his
power) in the eyes of all the nations. God's arm is a holy arm,
stretched out in purity and justice, in defence of holiness and in
pursuance of his promise.
[3.] All the world will have the benefit of it. In the great salvation
wrought out by our Lord Jesus the arm of the Lord was revealed and
all the ends of the earth were made to see the great salvation, not
as spectators of it only, as they saw the deliverance of the Jews out
of Babylon, but as sharers in it; some of all nations, the most remote,
shall partake of the benefits of the redemption. This is applied to our
salvation by Christ.
Luke 3:6,
All flesh shall see the salvation of God, that great
salvation.
II. It is here spoken of as a great business, which ought to be managed
with abundance of care and circumcision. When the liberty is
proclaimed,
1. Let the people of God hasten out of Babylon with all convenient
speed; though they are ever so well settled there, let them not think
of taking root in Babylon, but Depart, depart
(Isaiah 52:11),
go out from the midst of her; not only those that are in the
borders, but those that are in the midst, in the heart of the country,
let them be gone. Babylon is no place for Israelites. As soon as they
have leave to let go, let them lose no time. With this word God stirred
up the spirits of those that were moved to go up,
Ezra 1:5.
And it is a call to all those who are yet in the bondage of sin and
Satan to make use of the liberty which Christ has proclaimed to them.
And, if the Son make them free, they shall be free indeed.
2. Let them take heed of carrying away with them any of the pollutions
of Babylon: Touch no unclean thing. Now that God makes bare his
holy arm for you, be you holy as he is, and keep yourselves from
every wicked thing. When they came out of Egypt they brought with
them the idolatrous customs of Egypt
(Ezekiel 23:3),
which were their ruin; let them take heed of doing so now that they come
out of Babylon. Note, When we are receiving any special mercy from God
we ought more carefully than ever to watch against all impurity. But
especially let those be clean who bear the vessels of the
Lord, that is, the priests, who had the charge of the vessels of
the sanctuary (when they were restored by a particular grant) to carry
them to Jerusalem,
Ezra 1:7,8:23,
&c. Let them not only avoid touching any unclean thing, but be very
careful to cleanse themselves according to the purification of the
sanctuary. Christians are made to our God spiritual priests,
Revelation 1:6.
They are to bear the vessels of the Lord, are entrusted to keep the
ordinances of God pure and entire; it is a good thing that is committed
to them, and they ought to be clean, to wash their hands in innocency
and so to compass God's altars and carry his vessels, and keep
themselves pure.
3. Let them depend upon the presence of God with them and his
protection in their removal
(Isaiah 52:12):
You shall not go out with haste. They were to go with a diligent
haste, not to lose time nor linger as Lot in Sodom, but they were not
to go with a diffident distrustful haste, as if they were afraid of
being pursued (as when they came out of Egypt) or of having the orders
for their release recalled and countermanded: no, they shall find that,
as for God, his work is perfect, and therefore they need not make more
haste than good speed. Cyrus shall give them an honourable discharge,
and they shall have an honourable return, and not steal away; for
the Lord will go before them as their general and
commander-in-chief, and the God of Israel will be their
rearward, or he that will gather up those that are left behind. God
will both lead their van and bring up their rear; he will secure them
from enemies that either meet them or follow them, for with his favour
will he compass them. The pillar of cloud and fire, when they came out
of Egypt, sometimes went behind them, to secure their rear
(Exodus 14:19),
and God's presence with them would now be that to them which that
pillar was a visible token of. Those that are in the way of their duty
are under God's special protection; and he that believes this will not
make haste.
The Humiliation of the Messiah.
B. C. 706.
13 Behold, my servant shall deal prudently, he shall be exalted
and extolled, and be very high.
14 As many were astonished at thee; his visage was so marred more
than any man, and his form more than the sons of men:
15 So shall he sprinkle many nations; the kings shall shut
their mouths at him: for that which had not been told them
shall they see; and that which they had not heard shall they
consider.
Here, as in other places, for the confirming of the faith of God's
people and the encouraging of their hope in the promises of temporal
deliverances, the prophet passes from them to speak of the great
salvation which should in the fulness of time be wrought out by the
Messiah. As the prophecy of Christ's incarnation was intended for the
ratification of the promise of their deliverance from the Assyrian
army, so this of Christ's death and resurrection is to confirm the
promise of their return out of Babylon; for both these salvations were
typical of the great redemption and the prophecies of them had a
reference to that. This prophecy, which begins here and is continued to
the end of the next chapter, points as plainly as can be at Jesus
Christ; the ancient Jews understood it of the Messiah, though the
modern Jews take a great deal of pains to pervert it, and some of ours
(no friends therein to the Christian religion) will have it understood
of Jeremiah; but Philip, who hence preached Christ to the eunuch, has
put it past dispute that of him speaks the prophet this, of him
and of no other man,
Acts 8:34,35.
Here,
I. God owns Christ to be both commissioned and qualified for his
undertaking.
1. He is appointed to it. "He is my servant, whom I employ and
therefore will uphold." In his undertaking he does his Father's will,
seeks his Father's honour, and serves the interests of his Father's
kingdom.
2. He is qualified for it. He shall deal prudently, for the
spirit of wisdom and understanding shall rest upon him,
Isaiah 11:2.
The word is used concerning David when he behaved himself
wisely,
1 Samuel 18:14.
Christ is wisdom itself, and, in the contriving and carrying on the
work of our redemption, there appeared much of the wisdom of God in
a mystery,
1 Corinthians 2:7.
Christ, when he was here upon earth, dealt very prudently, to the
admiration of all.
II. He gives a short prospect both of his humiliation and his
exaltation. See here,
1. How he humbled himself: Many were astonished at him, as they
were at David when by reason of his sorrows and troubles he became a
wonder unto many,
Psalms 71:7.
Many wondered to see what base usage he met with, how inveterate people
were against him, how inhuman, and what indignities were done him:
His visage was marred more than any man's when he was buffeted,
smitten on the cheek, and crowned with thorns, and hid not his face
from shame and spitting. His face was foul with weeping, for he was
a man of sorrows; he that really was fairer than the children
of men had his face spoiled with the abuses that were done him.
Never was man used so barbarously; his form, when he took upon him
the form of a servant, was more mean and abject than that of any
of the sons of men. Those that saw him said, "Surely never man looked
so miserably, a worm and no man,"
Psalms 22:6.
The nation abhorred him
(Isaiah 49:7),
treated him as the off-scouring of all things. Never was sorrow like
unto his sorrow.
2. How highly God exalted him, and exalted him because he humbled
himself. Three words are used for this
(Isaiah 52:13):
He shalt be exalted and extolled and be very high. God shall
exalt him, men shall extol him, and with both he shall be very high,
higher than the highest, higher than the heavens. He shall prosper in
his work, and succeed in it, and that shall raise him very high.
(1.) Many nations shall be the better for him, for he shall sprinkle
them, and not the Jews only; the blood of sprinkling shall be
applied to their consciences, to purify them. He suffered, and died,
and so sprinkled many nations; for in his death there was a fountain
opened,
Zechariah 13:1.
He shall sprinkle many nations by his heavenly doctrine, which shall
drop as the rain and distil as the dew. Moses's did so only on one
nation
(Deuteronomy 32:2),
but Christ's on many nations. He shall do it by baptism, which is the
washing of the body with pure water,
Hebrews 10:22.
So that this promise had its accomplishment when Christ sent his
apostles to disciple all nations, by baptizing or sprinkling them.
(2.) The great ones of the nation shall show him respect: Kings
shall shut their mouths at him, that is, they shall not open their
mouths against him, as they have done, to contradict and blaspheme his
sacred oracles; nay, they shall acquiesce in, and be well pleased with,
the methods he takes of setting up his kingdom in the world; they shall
with great humility and reverence receive his oracles and laws, as
those who, when they heard Job's wisdom, after his speech spoke not
again,
Job 29:9,22.
Kings shall see and arise,
Isaiah 49:7.
(3.) The mystery which was kept secret from the beginning of the world
shall by him be made known to all nations for the obedience of
faith, as the apostle speaks,
Romans 16:25,26.
That which had not been told them shall they see; the gospel
brings to light things new and unheard of, which will awaken the
attention and engage the reverence of kings and kingdoms. This is
applied to the preaching of the gospel in the Gentile world,
Romans 15:21.
These words are there quoted according to the Septuagint translation:
To whom he was not spoken of they shall see, and those that have not
heard shall understand. As the things revealed had long been kept
secret, so the persons to whom they were revealed had long been kept in
the dark; but now they shall see and consider the glory of God shining
in the face of Christ, which before they had not been told of--they
had not heard. That shall be discovered to them by the gospel of
Christ which could never be told them by all the learning of their
philosophers, or the art of their diviners, or any of their pagan
oracles. Much had been said in the Old Testament concerning the
Messiah; much had been told them, and they had heard it. But, as the
queen of Sheba found concerning Solomon, what they shall see in him,
when he comes, shall far exceed what had been told them. Christ
disappointed the expectations of those who looked for a Messiah
according to their fancies, as the carnal Jews, but outdid theirs who
looked for such a Messiah as was promised. According to their faith,
nay, and beyond it, it was to them.
Matthew Henry "Verse by Verse Commentary for 'Isaiah' Matthew Henry Bible Commentary".
.