Verse 1
Isaiah 1:1. The vision of Isaiah
— “It seems doubtful,” says
Bishop Lowth, “whether this
title belongs to the whole book,
or only to the prophecy
contained in this chapter. The
former part of the title seems
properly to belong to this
particular prophecy: the latter
part, which enumerates the kings
of Judah, under whom Isaiah
exercised his prophetical
office, seems to appropriate it
to the whole collection of
prophecies delivered in the
course of his ministry. Vitringa,
to whom the world is greatly
indebted for his learned labours
on this prophet, has, I think,
very judiciously resolved this
doubt. He supposes, that the
former part of this title was
originally prefixed to this
single prophecy; and that when
the collection of all Isaiah’s
prophecies was made, the
enumeration of the kings of
Judah was added, to make it, at
the same time, a proper title to
the whole book. And such it is
plainly taken to be, 2
Chronicles 32:32; where the book
of Isaiah is cited by this
title.” Thus understood, the
word vision is used collectively
for visions, and the sense is,
“This is the book of the
visions, or prophecies, of
Isaiah.” The reader must
observe, the two usual ways,
whereby God communicated his
will to the prophets, were
visions and dreams: see Numbers
12:6. In visions, the inspired
persons were awake, but their
external senses were bound up,
and, as it were, laid asleep in
a trance. Thus Balaam describes
them as to himself, Numbers
24:16. They are called visions,
not from any use made of
corporal sight, but because of
the clearness and evidence of
the things revealed, and the
conformity of this kind of
inspiration to the information
which the mind receives by the
sight of the bodily eyes. Hence,
also, prophets were called
seers, 1 Samuel 9:9. Sometimes,
however, visions were
accompanied with external
representations. See Isaiah 6:1;
Ezekiel 40:2; Revelation 21:10.
See notes on Isaiah, by Wm.
Lowth, B.D. Which he saw —
Foresaw and foretold. For he
speaks, after the manner of the
prophets, of things to come, as
if they were either past or
present. Concerning Judah —
Principally, but not
exclusively. For he prophesies
also concerning Egypt and
Babylon, and divers other
countries; yet with respect to
Judah. In the days of Uzziah,
&c. — In the time of their
reign. This, probably, was not
the first vision which Isaiah
had, but is placed at the
beginning of his book, because,
together with the four following
chapters, it contains a general
description of the state of the
Jews, under the several
judgments which God had brought
upon them, and is a fit preface
or introduction to the rest of
his prophecy.
Verse 2
Isaiah 1:2. Hear, O heavens, &c.
— “God is introduced as entering
upon a solemn and public action,
or pleading, before the whole
world, against his disobedient
people. The prophet, as herald,
or officer, to proclaim the
summons to the court, calls upon
all created beings, celestial
and terrestrial, to attend and
bear witness to the truth of his
plea, and the justice of his
cause.” — Bishop Lowth. See the
same scene more fully displayed,
Psalms 50:3-4. With the like
invocation Moses begins his
sublime song, Deuteronomy 32:1;
see also Micah 6:1-2. For the
Lord hath spoken — Or, It is
Jehovah that speaketh, as Bishop
Lowth renders it, there seeming
to be an impropriety in
demanding attention to a speech
already delivered. I have
nourished, &c. — I first made
them a people, and, until this
time, I have sustained and
blessed them above all other
nations: God’s care over them is
compared to that of parents in
nursing and training up their
children. And they have rebelled
against me — Or, as פשׁעו ביmay
be rendered, have revolted from
me — Even they, peculiarly
favoured as they have been, have
proved deserters, nay, traitors,
against my crown and dignity.
This is the Lord’s plea against
them, of the equity of which he
is willing that all the
creatures should be judges.
Verse 3
Isaiah 1:3. The ox knoweth his
owner, &c. — In these words the
prophet amplifies “the gross
insensibility of the disobedient
Jews, by comparing them with the
most heavy and stupid of all
animals, yet not so insensible
as they. Bochart has well
illustrated the comparison, and
shown the peculiar force of it.
‘He sets them lower than the
beasts, and even than the
stupidest of all beasts; for
there is scarce any more so than
the ox and the ass. Yet these
acknowledge their master; they
know the manger of their lord;
by whom they are fed, not for
their own, but his good; neither
are they looked upon as
children, but as beasts of
burden; neither are they
advanced to honours, but
oppressed with great and daily
labours. While the Israelites,
chosen by the mere favour of
God, adopted as sons, promoted
to the highest dignity, yet
acknowledged not their Lord and
their God, but despised his
commandments, though in the
highest degree equitable and
just.’” See a comparison of
Jeremiah 8:7, to the same
purpose, equally elegant; but
not so forcible and severe as
this of Isaiah.
Verse 4
Isaiah 1:4. Ah, sinful nation —
The prophet bemoans those who
would not bemoan themselves; and
he speaks with a holy
indignation at their degeneracy,
and with a dread of the
consequences of it. A people
laden with iniquity — Laden, not
with the sense of sin, as those
described Matthew 11:28, but
with the guilt and bondage of
sin. A seed of evil- doers — The
children of wicked parents,
whose guilt they inherit, and
whose evil example they follow;
children that are corrupted —
Hebrew, משׁחיתים, that corrupt,
namely, themselves, or their
ways, or others, by their
counsel and example: or, that
destroy themselves and their
land by their wickedness. They
have forsaken the Lord — Not
indeed in profession, but in
practice, and therefore in
reality, neglecting or
corrupting his worship, and
refusing to be subject and
obedient to him. They have
provoked the Holy One, &c. —
They have lived as if it were
their great design and business
to provoke him. They are gone
away backward — Instead of
proceeding forward, and growing
in grace, which was their duty,
they are fallen from their
former professions, and have
become more wicked than ever.
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 1:5-6. Why should ye be
stricken any more — It is to no
purpose to seek to reclaim you
by one chastisement after
another; ye will revolt more and
more — I see you are
incorrigible, and turn even your
afflictions into sin. The whole
head is sick, &c. — The disease
is mortal, as being in the most
noble and vital parts, the very
head and heart of the body
politic, from whence the plague
is derived to all the other
members. “The end of God’s
judgments, in this world, is
men’s reformation; and when
people appear to be
incorrigible, there is no reason
to expect that he should try any
further methods of discipline
with them, but consume them all
at once.” From the sole of the
foot, &c. — “The whole frame of
the Jewish Church and state is
corrupted, and their misery is
as universal as their sin which
caused it.” — Lowth.
Verse 7-8
Isaiah 1:7-8. Your country is
desolate — “The description of
the ruined and desolate state of
the country, in these verses,”
says Bishop Lowth, “does not
suit with any part of the
prosperous times of Uzziah and
Jotham. It very well agrees with
the time of Ahaz, when Judea was
ravaged by the joint invasion of
the Israelites and Syrians, and
by the incursions of the
Philistines and Edomites. The
date of this prophecy is
therefore generally fixed to the
time of Ahaz.” Strangers devour
it in your presence — Which your
eyes see to torment you, when
there is no power in your hands
to deliver you. As overthrown,
&c. — כמהפכת, as the overthrow;
of strangers — That is, such as
strangers bring upon a land
which is not likely to continue
in their hands, and therefore
they spare no persons; and spoil
and destroy all things, which is
not usually done in wars between
persons of the same or of a
neighbouring nation. And the
daughter of Zion is left — Is
left solitary, all the
neighbouring villages and
country round about it being
laid waste. As a cottage — Or,
as a shed in a vineyard, as
Bishop Lowth translates it,
namely, “a little temporary hut,
covered with boughs, straw,
turf, or the like materials, for
a shelter from the heat by day,
and the cold and dews by night,
for the watchman that kept the
garden, or vineyard, during the
short season while the fruit was
ripening; see Job 27:18; and
presently removed when it had
served that purpose.” — See
Harmer, Observ. 1:454.
Verse 9
Isaiah 1:9. Except the Lord had
left us a remnant — If God, by
his infinite power and goodness,
had not restrained our enemies,
and reserved some of us, we
should have been as Sodom — The
whole nation of us had been
utterly cut off, as the people
of Sodom and Gomorrah were. So
great was the rage and power of
our enemies, and so utterly
unable were we to deliver
ourselves. This remnant was “a
type of those few converts among
the Jews, who, embracing the
gospel, escaped both the
temporal and eternal judgments
which came upon the rest of the
nation for rejecting Christ and
his messengers,” Romans 9:2;
Romans 11:5. — Lowth.
Verse 10
Isaiah 1:10. Hear the word of
the Lord — I bring a message
from your Lord and governor, to
whom you owe all reverence and
obedience; ye rulers of Sodom —
So called for their resemblance
of them in wickedness. Compare
Deuteronomy 32:32; Ezekiel
16:46; Ezekiel 16:48. “The
incidental mention of Sodom and
Gomorrah in the preceding verse,
suggested to the prophet this
spirited address to the rulers
and inhabitants of Jerusalem,
under the character of princes
of Sodom and people of Gomorrah.
Two examples, of an elegant
turn, of the like kind, may be
observed in St. Paul’s epistle
to the Romans 15:4-5; Romans
15:12-13.” — Bishop Lowth. Give
ear unto the law of our God —
The message which I am now to
deliver to you from God, your
great lawgiver.
Verse 11-12
Isaiah 1:11-12. To what purpose,
&c., your sacrifices unto me? —
Who am a Spirit, and therefore
cannot be satisfied with such
carnal oblations, but expect to
be worshipped in spirit and in
truth, and to have your hearts
and lives, as well as your
bodies and sacrifices, presented
unto me. I delight not in the
blood, &c. — He mentions the fat
and blood, because these were,
in a peculiar manner, reserved
for God, to intimate that even
the best of their sacrifices
were rejected by him. The
prophets often speak of the
ceremonies of Moses’s law as of
no value, without that inward
purity, and true spiritual
worship, and devotedness to God,
which were signified by them.
This was a very proper method to
prepare the minds of the Jews
for the reception of the gospel,
by which those ceremonies were
to be abolished. When ye come to
appear before me — Upon the
three solemn feasts, or upon
other occasions. Who hath
required this at your hand? —
The thing I commanded was not
only, nor chiefly, that you
should offer external
sacrifices, but that you should
do it with true repentance, with
faith in my promises, and
sincere resolutions of devoting
yourselves to my service.
Verse 13
Isaiah 1:13. Bring no more vain
oblations — I neither desire,
nor will accept of any on these
terms. Incense is an abomination
to me — So far is it from being
a sweet savour to me, as you
foolishly imagine. The new moons
— Which were holy to God, and
observed with great solemnity;
the calling of assemblies — At
all other solemn times, wherein
the people were obliged to meet
together. I cannot away with —
Hebrew, לא אוכל, I cannot
endure; it is grievous to me. It
is iniquity — It is so far from
pleasing me, that it is an
offence to me: and, instead of
reconciling me to you, which is
your design, it provokes me more
against you; even the solemn
meeting — The most solemn day of
each of the three feasts, which
was the last day, which was
called by this very name, עצרה,
Leviticus 23:36; Numbers 29:35,
and elsewhere; although the word
be used sometimes more generally
of any other solemn festival
day. Perhaps the great day of
atonement was especially
intended. Bishop Lowth renders
it, the day of restraint,
certain holy days, ordained by
the law, being distinguished by
a particular charge, that “no
servile work should be done
therein.” This circumstance
clearly explains the reason of
the name, the restraint, given
to those days.
Verse 15
Isaiah 1:15. When ye spread
forth your hands — When ye pray
with your hands spread abroad,
as the manner was; I will hide
mine eyes from you — I will take
no notice of your persons or
requests. Your hands are full of
blood — You are guilty of murder
and oppression, and of other
crying sins, which I abhor, and
have forbidden under pain of my
highest displeasure.
Verse 16-17
Isaiah 1:16-17. Wash ye, make
you clean — Repent, and do works
meet for repentance: cleanse
your hearts and hands from all
filthiness of flesh and spirit,
and do not content yourselves
with your ceremonial washings.
He refers to the charge
preferred in the preceding
clause, and alludes to the legal
purifications commanded on
several occasions: see Leviticus
14:8-9; Leviticus 14:47. Put
away the evil, &c., from before
mine eyes — Reform yourselves
thoroughly, that you may not
only approve yourselves to men,
but to me, who search your
hearts and try all your actions.
Learn to do well — Begin, and
inure yourselves, to live
soberly, righteously, and godly.
Seek judgment, &c. — Show your
religion to God, by practising
justice and mercy to men. Judge
the fatherless, &c. — Deliver
and defend those that are poor
and helpless, and liable to be
oppressed by unjust and potent
adversaries.
Verses 18-20
Isaiah 1:18-20. Come now, let us
reason together — The word
נוכחהis properly understood of
two contending parties arguing a
case; or, as Bishop Lowth
translates it, pleading
together; but here it seems to
import also the effect, or issue
of such a debate, namely, the
accommodating their differences.
Though your sins be as scarlet —
Red and bloody as theirs were,
mentioned Isaiah 1:15; great and
heinous; they shall be white as
snow — God, upon your repentance
and reformation, will pardon all
that is past, and look upon you
with the same grace and favour
as if you had never offended,
your sins being expiated by the
blood of the Messiah, typified
by your legal sacrifices. It is
a metonymical expression, by
which sins are said to be
purged, as Hebrews 1:3, when men
are purged from their sins,
Hebrews 9:14. If ye be willing
and obedient — If you be
heartily willing and fully
resolved to obey all my
commands; ye shall eat the good
of the land — Together with the
pardon of your sins, you shall
receive temporal and worldly
blessings. But if ye refuse and
rebel — If you obstinately
persist in your disobedience to
me, as hitherto you have done;
ye shall be devoured with the
sword — With the sword of your
enemies, which shall be
commissioned to destroy you, and
with the sword of God’s justice,
his wrath and vengeance, which
shall be drawn against you; for
the mouth of the Lord hath
spoken it — And he will surely
make it good for the maintaining
of his own honour.
Verse 21
Isaiah 1:21. How is the faithful
city — Jerusalem, which in the
reign of former kings was
faithful to God; become a harlot
— Filled with idolatry, called
whoredom in the Scriptures. It
was full of judgment, &c. —
Judgment was truly and duly
executed in all its courts, and
righteousness, or justice,
lodged, or had its seat in it;
but now murderers — Under that
one gross kind, he comprehends
all sorts of unrighteous men and
practices.
Verse 22-23
Isaiah 1:22-23. Thy silver is
become dross — Thou art wofully
degenerated from thy former
purity. Thy wine mixed with
water — If there be any remains
of religion and virtue in thee,
they are mixed with many and
great corruptions. Thy princes
are rebellious — Against me,
their sovereign Lord; and
companions of thieves — Partly
by giving them connivance and
countenance, and partly by
practising the same violence,
and cruelty, and injustice that
thieves used to do. Every one
loveth gifts — That is, bribes
given to pervert justice.
Verse 24
Isaiah 1:24. Ah, I will ease me,
&c. — This is an expression
borrowed from men’s passions,
who find some sort of ease and
rest in their minds upon venting
their anger on just occasions,
or in bringing offenders to
condign punishment. Thus God,
speaking after the manner of
men, represents himself as
feeling satisfaction in
executing justice upon obstinate
and incorrigible offenders.
Compare Ezekiel 5:13; Ezekiel
16:42; Ezekiel 21:17. But let it
be observed, God is never said
to take pleasure in the
punishment of any, but those who
have filled up the measure of
their iniquities.
Verse 25-26
Isaiah 1:25-26. And I will turn
my hand upon thee — I will
chastise thee again, and thereby
reform thee: or, I will do that
for the reviving of religion,
which I did at first for the
planting of it. And purge away
thy dross — I will purge out of
thee those wicked men that are
incorrigible, and, as for those
of you that are curable, I will
by my word, and by the furnace
of affliction, purge out all
that corruption that yet remains
in you. And I will restore thy
judges, &c. — I will give thee
such princes and magistrates as
thou hadst in the beginning,
either, 1st, Of thy
commonwealth, such as Moses and
Joshua: or, 2d, Of thy kingdom,
such as David. And thy
counsellors — Thy princes shall
have, and shall hearken to, wise
and faithful counsellors.
Afterward thou shalt be called —
Namely, justly and truly, the
city of righteousness, &c. —
Thou shalt be such. “The
reforming of the magistracy,”
says Henry, “is a good step
toward the reforming of the city
and country too.”
Verse 27-28
Isaiah 1:27-28. Zion shall be
redeemed — Shall be delivered
from all their enemies and
calamities; with judgment — By
the exercise of God’s strict
justice in destroying the
obdurate; by purging out those
wicked and incorrigible Jews,
who, by their sins, hindered the
deliverance of the people; and
by punishing and destroying
their unmerciful enemies who
kept them in cruel bondage; and
her converts — Hebrew, ושׁביה,
her returners, those of them who
shall come out of captivity into
their own land; with
righteousness — Or, by
righteousness; either by God’s
faithfulness, in keeping his
promise of delivering them after
seventy years, or by his
goodness; for both these
qualities come under the name of
righteousness in the Scriptures.
And, or rather, but, the
destruction of the
transgressors, &c., shall be
together — Though I will deliver
my people from the Babylonish
captivity, yet those of them who
shall still go on in their
wickedness, shall not have the
benefit of that mercy, but shall
be reserved for a more dreadful
and total destruction.
Verse 29
Isaiah 1:29. For they shall be
ashamed — He does not speak of
an ingenuous and penitential
shame for sin, but of an
involuntary and penal shame for
the disappointment of the hopes
which they had placed in their
idols; of the oaks which ye have
desired — Which, after the
manner of the heathen, you have
consecrated to idolatrous uses.
Of what particular kind the
trees here mentioned were,
cannot be determined with
certainty. The Hebrew word אלה,
here used, is rendered ilex by
Bishop Lowth, which properly
means the scarlet oak. Others
think the terebinth-tree was
intended. And ye shall be
confounded for the gardens, &c.
— In which, as well as in the
groves, they practised idolatry:
see Isaiah 65:3; and Isaiah
66:17. “Sacred groves,” the
reader will observe, “were a
very ancient and favourite
appendage of idolatry. They were
furnished with the temple of the
god to whom they were dedicated;
with altars, images, and every
thing necessary for performing
the various rites of worship
offered there; and were the
scenes of many impure
ceremonies, and of much
abominable superstition. They
made a principal part of the
religion of the old inhabitants
of Canaan; and the Israelites
were commanded to destroy their
groves, among other monuments of
their false worship. The
Israelites themselves, however,
became afterward very much
addicted to this species of
idolatry:” see Ezekiel 20:28;
Hosea 4:13. Bishop Lowth.
Verse 30
Isaiah 1:30. For ye shall be as
an oak, &c. — As you have sinned
under the oaks and in the
gardens, so you shall be like
unto oaks and gardens, not when
they are green and flourishing,
but when they wither and decay.
This verse is remarkably
elegant, in which, what was the
pleasure and confidence of those
idolaters, is made to denote
their punishment. “All the
gardens in the East,” says a
late writer, “have water in
them, which is so absolutely
necessary, that without it every
thing, in summer, would be
parched up. This is a
circumstance which we should
attend to, if we would enter
into the energy of the latter
clause.”
Verse 31
Isaiah 1:31. And the strong —
The wisest, strongest, or
richest persons among you, who
think to secure themselves
against the threatened danger by
their wisdom, wealth, or power,
and much more they that are weak
and helpless; shall be as tow —
Shall be as suddenly and easily
consumed by God’s judgments as
tow is by the fire. And the
maker of it — The maker of the
idol, who can neither save
himself nor his workmanship; as
a spark — To set it on fire: by
his sin he shall bring himself
to ruin. Or, as פעלו לניצוצ, may
be rendered, his work shall
become a spark, shall be the
cause of his destruction. “The
words are elegant, and the
meaning of them is, that the
rich, the powerful, the great,
(meant by the word החסן, which
we render strong,) who seemed
like a lofty and well-rooted
oak, shall perish with their
works: for their works, their
great and wicked undertakings,
by which they had sought safety,
like sparks, shall set them on
fire and consume them like tow.
They shall perish, like fools,
by their own devices. The very
works themselves, which they had
raised for the glory and
preservation of themselves and
their republic, shall be turned
into the very cause of their
destruction. Vitringa thinks the
prophet alludes to the
destruction of their state and
temple by the Romans.” — Dodd. |