8. head--that is, in both Syria and Israel the capital shall remain
as it is; they shall not conquer Judah, but each shall possess only his
own dominions.
threescore and five . . . not a people--As these words break the
symmetry of the parallelism in this verse, either they ought to be
placed after "Remaliah's son," in
Isa 7:9,
or else they refer to some older prophecy of Isaiah, or of Amos (as the
Jewish writers represent), parenthetically; to which, in
Isa 7:8,
the words, "If ye will not believe . . . not be established,"
correspond in parallelism. One deportation of Israel happened
within one or two years from this time, under Tiglath-pileser
(2Ki 15:29).
Another in the reign of Hoshea, under Shalmaneser
(2Ki 17:1-6),
was about twenty years after. But the final one which utterly "broke"
up Israel so as to be "not a people," accompanied by a colonization of
Samaria with foreigners, was under Esar-haddon, who carried away
Manasseh, king of Judah, also, in the twenty-second year of his reign,
sixty-five years from the utterance of this prophecy (compare
Ezr 4:2, 3, 10,
with 2Ki 17:24;
2Ch 33:11)
[USHER]. The event, though so far off, was enough
to assure the people of Judah that as God, the Head of the theocracy,
would ultimately interpose to destroy the enemies of His people,
so they might rely on Him now.
JFB.
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