Verse 1
Isaiah 2:1. The word that Isaiah
saw — The matter, or thing, as
the Hebrew word, הדבר, commonly
signifies; the prophecy or
vision. He speaks of the
prophecy contained in this and
the two following chapters,
which makes one continued
discourse. “The first five
verses of this chapter foretel
the kingdom of the Messiah, the
conversion of the Gentiles, and
their admission into it. From
the 6th verse to the end of this
second chapter is foretold the
punishment of the unbelieving
Jews for their idolatrous
practices, their confidence in
their own strength, and distrust
of God’s protection: and,
moreover, the destruction of
idolatry in consequence of the
establishment of the Messiah’s
kingdom. The whole third
chapter, with Isaiah 2:1, of the
fourth, is a prophecy of the
calamities of the Babylonian
invasion and captivity; with a
particular amplification of the
distress of the proud and
luxurious daughters of Sion.
Isaiah 4:2-6, promises to the
remnant, which shall have
escaped this severe purgation, a
future restoration to the favour
and protection of God. This
prophecy was probably delivered
in the time of Jotham, or,
perhaps, in that of Uzziah, to
which time not any of his
prophecies (and he prophesied in
their days) is so applicable as
that of these chapters.” —
Bishop Lowth.
Verse 2
Isaiah 2:2. And — Or rather,
now, it shall come to pass in
the last days — The times of the
Messiah, which are always spoken
of by the prophets as the last
days, because they are the last
times and state of the church,
Christ’s institutions being to
continue to the end of the
world. See Joel 2:28, compared
with Acts 2:17; Micah 4:1,
compared with Hebrews 1:1; 1
Peter 1:20. The Jews, it must be
observed, divided the times or
succession of the world into
three ages or periods: the
first, before the law; the
second, under the law; the
third, under the Messiah: which
they justly considered as the
last dispensation, designed of
God to remain till the
consummation of all things.
“Accordingly St. Paul tells us,
that Christ appeared επι
συντελεια των αιωνων, at the
consummation of the ages, or
several periods of the world,
Hebrews 9:26; and, speaking of
his own times, saith, τελη των
αιωνων, the ends of the world,
or conclusion of the ages, are
come, 1 Corinthians 10:11. The
mountain of the Lord’s house —
Mount Moriah, on which the
Lord’s house stood, or rather,
the Lord’s house upon that
mount, shall be established upon
the top of the mountains — Shall
be raised above, be rendered
more conspicuous than, and shall
be preferred before, all other
mountains on which houses are
built, and altars erected and
dedicated to any god or gods.
The prophet speaks figuratively.
He means, that the worship of
the true God should be
established on the ruins of
idolatry, that the true religion
should swallow up all false
religions, and the church of
God, typified by the temple at
Jerusalem, become most eminent
and conspicuous, as a city on a
high mountain: and shall be
exalted above the hills — Above
all churches, states, and
kingdoms in the world, and all
that is excellent and glorious
therein. The stone cut out of
the mountain, without hands,
shall become itself a mountain,
and shall fill the whole earth,
Daniel 2:34-35. And all nations
— Even the Gentile nations;
shall flow unto it — Shall come
in great abundance and with
great eagerness to embrace the
true religion, and become
members of the true church, like
broad streams, or mighty rivers,
flowing swiftly and impetuously
toward the ocean, as the word
נהרי, here used, signifies. Now,
it is well known, this was not
the case with respect to the
Jewish Church at Jerusalem, or
the worship there established.
It never happened, during the
ages that intervened between the
time of Isaiah and the
destruction of their city and
temple, and the dispersion of
their nation by the Romans, that
their religion was so exalted,
or made such great account of,
by any nations remote or near,
as is here expressed: much less
did whole nations flow unto
them, or unite themselves with
them in the service of God, and
in church fellowship. But this
prophecy has been in a great
measure fulfilled with regard to
the Christian Church, which has
so drawn to it the greater part
of the civilized nations, that
it has far, very far, surpassed
all other religious
institutions, whether Jewish,
heathen, or Mohammedan: and when
the last of the four kingdoms,
spoken of Daniel 2:35; Daniel
2:40-45; Daniel 7:19-27, shall
be destroyed, and thereby all
obstructions removed, it shall
be fully and perfectly
accomplished, and the kingdom
under the whole heaven shall be
given to the people of the Most
High. For the Messiah shall have
dominion from sea to sea, and
from the river to the ends of
the earth: yea, all kings shall
fall down before him, and all
nations shall serve him, Psalms
72:8; Psalms 72:11.
Verse 3
Isaiah 2:3. And many people
shall go — Shall not only have
some weak desires of going, but
shall take pains, and actually
go; and say, Come, &c. — Yea,
such shall be their zeal, that
they shall not only go
themselves, but shall persuade
and press others to go with
them. And we will walk in his
paths — Thus they show the truth
of their conversion, by their
hearty desire to be instructed
in the way of worshipping and
serving God acceptably, and by
their firm purpose of practising
the instructions given. For out
of Zion shall go forth the law —
The new law, the doctrine of the
gospel, which is frequently
called a law, because it hath
the nature and power of a law,
obliging us no less to the
belief and practice of it than
the old law did; and the word of
the Lord — For the
accomplishment of this promise,
see Luke 24:47; Acts 1:8; Romans
10:18. This last clause shows
the reason why the people should
be so forward to go, and to
invite others to go with them.
Verse 4
Isaiah 2:4. He shall judge among
the nations — He shall set up
and exercise his authority, in
and over all nations, not only
giving laws to them, as other
rulers do, but doing that which
no others can do, convincing
their consciences, changing
their hearts, and ordering their
lives; and shall rebuke many
people — By the power of his
word, compared to a two- edged
sword in Scripture, and by the
grace of his Spirit, convincing
the world of sin: as also by the
remarkable judgments which he
will execute on those that are
incorrigible, and especially on
those of his implacable enemies
who set themselves to oppose the
propagation of his gospel. They
shall beat their swords into
plough-shares — This description
of a well- established peace is
very poetical. The Prophet Joel
hath reversed it, and applied it
to war prevailing over peace;
beat your plough-shares into
swords, and your pruning-hooks
into spears, Joel 3:10. And so
likewise the Roman poet: —
“Non ullus aratro Dignus honos,
squalent abductis arva colonis,
Et curvæ rigidum falces
conflantur in ensem.” Virg.
Georg. 1:506.
“The peaceful peasant to the
wars is press’d;
The fields lie fallow in
inglorious rest.
The plain no pasture to the
flock affords,
The crooked scythes are
straightened into swords.”
Dryden.
Nation shall not lift up sword
against nation — Peace is
frequently mentioned in
Scripture as the distinguishing
character of Christ’s kingdom,
and he himself is called the
prince of peace. The design and
tendency of his gospel are to
produce a peaceable disposition
in mankind, by subduing their
pride, and various passions and
lusts, which are the causes of
wars and contentions, and by
working in them humility,
meekness, self-denial, and true
and fervent love to all men,
from whence peace necessarily
follows. And the gospel actually
does produce this effect in
those that rightly receive it.
It disposes them, as much as in
them lieth, to live peaceably
with all men. And as to that
dissension and war which the
preaching of the gospel has
sometimes occasioned, as it was
foretold it would do, Matthew
10:21-22, it was wholly
accidental, arising from men’s
corrupt lusts and interests,
which the gospel opposes; and it
was not among those who received
the truth in the love of it, but
between them and those who were
either open enemies, or false
friends to them and to the
gospel. But this passage
foretels that even an external
and general peace will be
established in the world under
the reign of the Messiah, which
undoubtedly, in due time, will
take place, namely, when the
fulness of the Gentiles shall be
brought in, and all Israel shall
be saved, and both Jews and
Gentiles shall be united
together in one fold, under
Christ their great Shepherd.
Verse 5
Isaiah 2:5. O house of Jacob,
come ye — Since the Gentiles
will be thus ready and resolved
to seek and serve the Lord, and
to excite one another so to do,
let this oblige and provoke you,
O ye Israelites, to join with,
or rather to go before them in
this good work. “The prophet,”
says Lowth, “addresses himself
to those Jews of later times,
that should live when the glad
tidings of the gospel should be
published; and exhorts them to
make use of those means of grace
which God would so plentifully
afford them, and not continue
stubborn and refractory, like
their forefathers, which
disobedience of theirs had
provoked him to forsake them, as
it follows, Isaiah 2:6. And let
us walk in the light of the Lord
— Take heed that you do not
reject that light, which will be
so clear, that even the blind
Gentiles will discern it.”
Verse 6
Isaiah 2:6. Therefore — For the
following causes; thou hast
forsaken thy people — Or, wilt
certainly forsake and reject
them. The house of Jacob — The
body of that nation. The prophet
here begins his complaint of the
state of the Jewish nation, and
“assigns the reason of God’s
withdrawing his kindness from
those of the present age, (as
there would be a more remarkable
rejection of them under the
gospel,) because of their
following the corrupt manners of
the idolatrous nations round
about them, in seeking to
soothsayers and wizards, which
God had solemnly and expressly
forbidden, Deuteronomy 18:14.” —
Lowth. Because they are
replenished from the east — Or,
as the margin reads it, more
than the east, which Dr.
Waterland interprets, They are
fuller of sorceries than the
east; and Bishop Lowth, They are
filled with divination from the
east. The general meaning seems
to be, that their land was full
of the impious, superstitious,
and idolatrous manners of the
eastern nations, the Syrians and
Chaldeans, and perhaps also they
had encouraged these heathen to
settle among them, that they
might learn their customs. And
are soothsayers — Undertaking to
discover secret things, and to
foretel future, contingent
events, by observing the stars,
or the clouds, or the flight of
birds, and in other ways of
divination; like the Philistines
— Who were infamous for those
practices; of which see one
instance, 1 Samuel 6:2. They
please themselves in the
children of strangers — They
delight in their company and
conversation, making leagues,
and friendships, and marriages
with them. Dr. Waterland renders
the clause, They please
themselves in the conceptions,
or productions, of strangers.
Verse 7
Isaiah 2:7. Their land also is
full of silver, &c. — They have
heaped up riches immoderately,
and still are greedily pursuing
after more. Lowth thinks the
prophet is especially reproving
those who, in the midst of the
public calamities, made no
conscience of enriching
themselves by oppression and
injustice. Their land also is
full of horses — Which even
their kings were forbidden to
multiply, (as they were also
forbidden to multiply gold and
silver,) and much more the
people. In the original this
verse consists of a stanza of
four lines, in which the
construction of the two members
is alternate, the first line
answering to the third, and the
second to the fourth.
Verse 8-9
Isaiah 2:8-9. Their land also is
full of idols — Every city had
its god, (Jeremiah 11:13,) and,
according to the goodness and
fertility of their lands, they
made goodly images, Hosea 10:1.
They worship the work of their
own hands — They gave that
worship to their own creatures,
to the images which their own
fancies had devised, and their
own fingers had made, which they
denied to JEHOVAH their Creator,
than which nothing could be more
impious or more absurd. And the
mean man boweth down, &c. — Men
of all ranks, both high and low,
rich and poor, learned and
ignorant, fall down and worship
idols. The corruption is
universal, and the whole land is
given to idolatry. Therefore
forgive them not — Thou wilt not
forgive them, the imperative
being put for the future, as we
have seen it frequently is in
the Psalms. Vitringa, however,
Dr. Waterland, and Bishop Lowth,
with many others, consider this
verse, not as describing their
idolatry, but as a predicting
the punishment which God was
about to bring upon them for it;
and therefore translate it, in
perfect consistency with the
Hebrew, in the future tense,
thus: Therefore the mean man
shall be bowed down, and the
mighty man shall be humbled; and
thou wilt not forgive them.
“They bowed themselves down to
their idols, therefore shall
they be bowed down, and brought
low, under the avenging hand of
God.” — Bishop Lowth. According
to this interpretation, “the
prophet begins here to describe
the imminent severe judgments of
God, wherewith he would punish
the pride of these men, and
their alienation from the true
worship of God and their
disobedience to his law.”
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 2:10-11. Enter into the
rock, &c. — Such calamities are
coming upon you, that you will
be ready to hide yourselves in
rocks and caves of the earth,
for fear of the glorious and
terrible judgments of God. The
lofty looks of man shall be
humbled — The eyes that looked
high; the countenance, in which
the pride of the heart had
showed itself, shall be cast
down in shame and despair. The
haughtiness of men shall be
bowed down — Judicially, as they
prostrated themselves before
their idols voluntarily, the
punishment being suited to their
sin. And the Lord alone shall be
exalted — The justice and power
of Jehovah shall be magnified,
and the impotence and vanity of
all other gods shall be
detected, at the same time that
the self-confidence,
self-sufficiency, and vain glory
of man are abased and vilified.
Verses 12-16
Isaiah 2:12-16. For the day of
the Lord — The time of God’s
taking vengeance on sinners;
shall be upon every one that is
proud — To mortify and bring him
down to the dust; and upon all
the cedars of Lebanon, &c. — In
these and the following words,
to Isaiah 2:17, the prophet is
considered, by most
commentators, as speaking
metaphorically, according to the
symbolical language of the
Egyptian hieroglyphics. The
cedars of Lebanon, and oaks of
Bashan, are supposed to mean
princes and nobles, who carried
themselves high, and behaved
themselves insolently; high
mountains and hills, to signify
states and cities; high towers
and fenced walls, those who
excelled in ingenuity, wisdom,
and strength; and the ships of
Tarshish, &c., (Isaiah 2:16,)
the merchants who confided in
their wealth and splendour. Thus
Bishop Lowth: “These verses
afford us a striking example of
that peculiar way of writing,
which makes a principal
characteristic of the
parabolical, or poetical style
of the Hebrews, and in which
their prophets deal so largely:
namely, their manner of
exhibiting things divine,
spiritual, moral, and political,
by a set of images taken from
things natural, artificial,
religious, historical, in the
way of metaphor or allegory.
Thus, you will find in many
other places, besides this
before us, that cedars of
Libanus and oaks of Bashan are
used, in the way of metaphor and
allegory, for kings, princes,
potentates, of the highest rank;
high mountains and lofty hills,
for kingdoms, republics, states,
cities; towers and fortresses,
for defenders and protectors,
whether by counsel or strength,
in peace or war; ships of
Tarshish, and works of art and
invention employed in adorning
them, for merchants, men
enriched by commerce, and
abounding in all the luxuries
and elegancies of life, such as
those of Tyre and Sidon; for it
appears from the course of the
whole passage, and from the
train of ideas, that the
fortresses and ships are to be
taken metaphorically, as well as
the high trees and lofty
mountains.” Some, however, it
may be observed, incline to
understand this whole passage
literally, remarking, that the
judgment was to be so universal
and terrible, as not only to
reach to men, but to things
also, whether natural or
artificial, in all which there
would be manifest tokens of
God’s displeasure against the
land. “Ships of Tarshish,” adds
Bishop Lowth, “are in Scripture
frequently used by a metonymy
for ships in general, especially
such as are employed in carrying
on traffic between distant
countries; as Tarshish was the
most celebrated mart of those
times, frequented of old by the
Phenicians, and the principal
source of wealth to Judea and
the neighbouring countries. The
learned seem now to be perfectly
agreed that Tarshish is
Tartessus, a city of Spain,
(near Cadiz, now called
Tariffa,) at the mouth of the
river Bœtis, (now named
Guadalquiver, running through
Andalusia,) whence the
Phenicians, who first opened
this trade, brought silver and
gold, (Jeremiah 10:9; Ezekiel
27:12,) in which that country
then abounded; and, pursuing
their voyage still further to
the Cassiterides, the islands of
Sicily and Cornwall, they
brought from thence lead and
tin.”
Verse 17-18
Isaiah 2:17-18. And the
loftiness of man shall be bowed
down — Here the prophet
expresses literally what he had
delivered metaphorically in the
preceding verses. The same
things were asserted Isaiah
2:11, but they are here
repeated, partly to assure the
people of the certainty of them,
and partly to fix them more
deeply in their minds, because
men are very backward to believe
and consider things of this
nature. And the idols he shall
utterly abolish — He will
discover the impotency of idols
to succour their worshippers,
and thereby destroy the worship
of them in the world.
Verse 19
Isaiah 2:19. And they — The
idolatrous Israelites; shall go
into the holes of the rocks, &c.
— Their usual places of retreat
in cases of danger; see Joshua
10:16; 6:2; 1 Samuel 13:6. The
idea is taken from the nature of
the land of Canaan; which was
full of caves and dens; for fear
of the Lord, and the glory of
his majesty, &c. — “The meaning
is, that there should be, at
this time, a great and most
bright display of the divine
majesty and justice, which the
impious and hypocritical could
not bear; and that, struck with
the terror of the divine
judgment, they should consult
for their safety, with the
utmost terror and consternation,
in caves, dens, and holes of the
earth.” “The Prophet Hosea hath
carried the same image further,
and added great strength and
spirit to it, Hosea 10:8. They
shall say to the mountains,
Cover us; and to the hills, Fall
on us; which image, together
with these of Isaiah, is adopted
by the sublime author of the
Revelation 6:15-16.” See Dodd
and Bishop Lowth.
Verse 20
Isaiah 2:20. In that day a man
shall cast his idols, &c., to
the moles and to the bats —
Shall cast them into the meanest
and darkest places, in which
moles and bats have their abode;
whereas before they set them up
in high and honourable places,
where they might be seen and
worshipped. Or, as Bishop Lowth
thinks the meaning may be. “They
shall carry their idols with
them into the dark caverns, old
ruins, or desolate places, to
which they shall flee for
refuge; and so shall give them
up, and relinquish them to the
filthy animals that frequent
such places, and have taken
possession of them as their
proper habitation.” The wasting
of Judah by the Syrians and
Israelites in the time of Ahaz,
might be here first in the
prophet’s view, when, besides a
great multitude that were partly
slain, and partly carried
captive to Damascus by the
Syrians, the king of Israel slew
in Judah one hundred and twenty
thousand in one day, and carried
away captive, of men, women, and
children, two hundred thousand,
taking away also much spoil, 2
Chronicles 28:5-6; 2 Chronicles
28:8. The prophecy may refer,
secondly, to the invasion of the
country by Sennacherib; but,
undoubtedly, the destruction of
Judah and Jerusalem by the
Chaldeans, and the Babylonish
captivity, are chiefly intended,
for then idolatry was entirely
abolished among the Jews, and
never practised by them
afterward.
Verse 22
Isaiah 2:22. Cease ye from man —
“The prophet here subjoins an
admonitory exhortation to the
men of his own and of all times,
to dissuade them from placing
any confidence in man, however
excellent in dignity, or great
in power; as his life depends
upon the air which he breathes
through his nostrils, and which,
if it be stopped, he is no more;
and therefore, if you abstract
from him the providence and
grace of God, and consider him
as left to himself, he is worthy
of very little confidence and
regard: see Psalms 146:3-4.
Vitringa is of opinion, that the
prophet here alludes immediately
to the kings of Egypt: see
Isaiah 31:3. And he adds, that
the mystical interpretation of
the period from the twelfth to
this verse, may refer also to
other days of the divine
judgment, of which there are
four peculiarly noted in
Scripture, as referring to the
new economy. 1st, The day of the
subversion of the Jewish
republic; 2d, The day of
vengeance on the governors of
the Roman empire, the
persecutors of the church, in
the time of Constantine; 3d, The
future day of judgment hereafter
to take place upon Antichrist
and his crew; of which the
prophets, and St. John in the
Revelation particularly, have
spoken; and, 4th, The day of
general judgment. It is to this
third day that he thinks the
present period more immediately
refers: see 2 Thessalonians 2:2;
Revelation 16:14.” — Dodd. |