53. Here follows a promise of restoration. Even the sore chastisements
coming on Judah would fail to reform its people; God's returning
goodness alone would effect this, to show how entirely of grace was to
be their restoration. The restoration of her erring sisters is mentioned
before hers, even as their punishment preceded her punishment; so all
self-boasting is excluded
[FAIRBAIRN]. "Ye shall, indeed, at some time
or other return, but Moab and Ammon shall return with you, and some of
the ten tribes" [GROTIUS].
bring again . . . captivity--that is, change the affliction into
prosperity (so
Job 42:10).
Sodom itself was not so restored
(Jer 20:16),
but Ammon and Moab (her representatives, as sprung from Lot who dwelt
in Sodom) were
(Jer 48:47; 49:6);
probably most of the ten tribes and the adjoining nations, Ammon and
Moab, &c., were in part restored under Cyrus; but the full realization
of the restoration is yet future; the heathen nations to be
brought to Christ being typified by "Sodom," whose sins they now
reproduce
(De 32:32).
captivity of thy captives--literally, "of thy captivities." However,
the gracious promise rather begins with the "nevertheless"
(Eze 16:60),
not here; for
Eze 16:59
is a threat, not a promise. The sense here thus is, Thou shalt be
restored when Sodom and Samaria are, but not till then
(Eze 16:55),
that is, never. This applies to the guilty who should be utterly
destroyed
(Eze 16:41, 42);
but it does not contradict the subsequent promise of restoration to
their posterity
(Nu 14:29-33),
and to the elect remnant of grace [CALVIN].
JFB.
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