4. The occasion of the "joy," the deliverance not only of Ahaz and
Judah from the Assyrian tribute
(2Ki 16:8),
and of Israel's ten tribes from the oppressor
(2Ki 15:19),
but of the Jewish ChristianChurch from its last great enemy.
hast--the past time for the future, in prophetic vision; it expresses
the certainty of the event.
yoke of his burden--the yoke with which he was burdened.
staff of . . . shoulder--the staff which strikes his shoulder
[MAURER];
or the wood, like a yoke, on the neck of slaves, the badge of servitude
[ROSENMULLER].
day of Midian--
(Jud 7:8-22).
As Gideon with a handful of men conquered the hosts of Midian, so
Messiah the "child"
(Isa 9:6)
shall prove to be the "Prince of peace," and the small Israel under Him
shall overcome the mighty hosts of Antichrist (compare
Mic 5:2-5),
containing the same contrast, and alluding also to "the Assyrian," the
then enemy of the Church, as here in Isaiah, the type of the last great
enemy. For further analogies between Gideon's victory and the Gospel,
compare
2Co 4:7,
with Jud 7:22.
As the "dividing of the spoil"
(Isa 9:3)
was followed by that which was "not joy," the making of the idolatrous
ephod
(Jud 8:24-27),
so the gospel victory was soon followed by apostasy at the first, and
shall be so again after the millennial overthrow of Antichrist
(Re 20:3, 7-9),
previous to Satan's last doom
(Re 20:10).
JFB.
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