Verse 1
Isaiah 3:1. For, &c. — The
prophet, having in the preceding
chapter declared, in general
terms, the terror of the day of
the Lord, now descends to a more
particular explication, and
special confirmation of what he
had advanced concerning it.
Behold — Look upon what follows
to be as certain as if it were
already accomplished; the Lord
doth take away, &c., the stay
and the staff — All their
supports, of what kind soever;
all the things they trust to,
and look for help and relief
from; the whole stay of bread,
and the whole stay of water —
Bread is commonly called the
staff of life: see Leviticus
26:26; Ezekiel 14:13. But by
bread and water here are meant
all kinds of aliment, whereby
the body is supported. This
judgment seems to relate
especially to the siege of
Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, when
bread and water were both very
scarce: see Jeremiah 14:1-6;
Jeremiah 37:21; Jeremiah 38:9.
Verse 2-3
Isaiah 3:2-3. The mighty man,
&c. — Strong and valiant men.
The judge — The civil
magistrates; and the prophet —
Either strictly so called, the
want of whom is matter of grief,
(Psalms 74:9,) or more largely
taken, so as to include all
skilful and faithful teachers;
and the prudent — Whose wisdom
and conduct were necessary to
preserve them from ruin; and the
ancient — Whose wisdom was
increased by long experience.
This likewise relates to the
same times, particularly to
Jehoiachin’s captivity, when all
the men of note were carried
away captive with him, 2 Kings
24:14. The captain of fifty —
There shall not be a man left
able to command fifty soldiers,
much less such as could command
hundreds or thousands, who yet
were necessary; and the
honourable man — Men of high
birth, place, power, and
reputation; and the counsellor —
Wise and learned statesmen; and
the cunning artificer — Who
could make either ornaments for
times of peace, or instruments
for war, whom therefore
conquerors were wont to take
away from those nations whom
they subdued, 1 Samuel 13:19-20;
2 Kings 24:14; and the eloquent
orator — Hebrew, נבון לחשׁ,
literally, the skilful of charm,
or the skilful charmer, or
enchanter; whereby he
understands either, 1st,
Charmers, whom he threatens God
would take away, not as if such
persons were blessings to a
people, or the removing of them
a curse, but only because they
made great use of them, and
trusted to them. And so he
signifies that God would remove
all the grounds of their
confidence, both right and
wrong, and make their case
desperate. Thus, for the same
reason, God threatens the
Israelites, (Hosea 3:4,) that
they should be, as without a
sacrifice, so without an image
and teraphim. Or, he may mean,
2d, Such as could persuade
powerfully, and, as it were,
charm people, by their
eloquence, and induce them to do
those things which were
necessary for their safety; for
the expression may be taken in a
good sense, as קסם, divination,
is Proverbs 16:10. Accordingly,
Bishop Lowth translates it, the
powerful in persuasion.
Verse 4-5
Isaiah 3:4-5. And I will give
children to be their princes —
Either, 1st, Children in age,
whose minority corrupt ministers
of state commonly abuse, to the
producing of much evil: or, 2d,
In understanding and experience.
When all the eminent persons,
mentioned Isaiah 3:2-3, were
removed, the necessary
consequence must be, that
persons of no qualifications for
government must succeed in their
places. This also was fully
accomplished in the succession
of weak and wicked princes, from
the death of Josiah to the
destruction of the city and
temple. And the people shall be
oppressed — By the command or
permission of such childish
rulers. The child shall behave
himself proudly, &c. — The child
in understanding, or the young
and inexperienced; and the base
against the honourable — “The
usual effects,” says Lowth, “of
a weak and unsettled government,
where faction grows too hard for
justice, and seditious men
become so bold as openly to
insult those that are in
authority.”
Verses 6-8
Isaiah 3:6-8. A man shall take
hold of his brother — Of his
relation, friend, or neighbour.
To take hold of another implies
entreating his assistance; see
Isaiah 4:1; Zechariah 8:23;
saying, Thou hast clothing — We
are utterly undone, and have
neither food nor raiment; but
thou hast something left to
support the dignity, which we
offer to thee; be thou our ruler
—
And we will be subject to thee.
It is taken for granted that
there would be no way of
redressing all these grievances,
and bringing things into order
again, but by good magistrates,
who should be invested with
power by common consent, and
exert that power for the good of
the community; and let this ruin
be under thy hand — Namely, to
heal it. In that day he shall
swear — To show that he was
resolved. Hebrew, he shall lift
up, namely, his hand, which was
the usual gesture in swearing; I
will not be a healer — A
repairer of the ruins of the
state; for in my house is
neither bread nor clothing — I
have not sufficient provisions,
either of food or raiment, for
my own family; much less, as you
falsely suppose, for the
discharge of so high a trust.
For Jerusalem is ruined — The
case is desperate, and past
relief: it will be to no purpose
to attempt affording any;
because their tongue and their
doings are against the Lord —
They have broken the law of God
in word and deed, and that in
contempt of his authority and
defiance of his justice. Their
tongue was against the Lord, for
they contradicted his prophets,
and their doings were against
him, for they acted as they
spoke; to provoke the eyes of
his glory — Of his glorious
majesty, whom they ought to
reverence and adore; the
all-seeing eyes of Him who is of
purer eyes than to behold
iniquity, unless with
abhorrence.
Verse 9
Isaiah 3:9. The show of their
countenance — Their pride,
wantonness, and impiety,
manifestly show themselves in
their very looks and whole
behaviour, and will be swift
witnesses against them, both
before God and men. They declare
their sin as Sodom — They commit
it publicly, casting off all
fear of God, and reverence to
men; and they glory in it. They
hide it not — As men do, who
have any remains of modesty or
ingenuity. They have rewarded
evil to themselves — That is,
procured a fit recompense for
their wickedness, even utter
ruin; or, they have done evil,
&c. They cannot blame God, but
themselves: their destruction is
wholly from themselves. The word
הכרה, rendered show, in the
first clause of the verse, not
occurring elsewhere in the
Bible, is of rather uncertain
signification. Bishop Lowth
renders it, steadfastness; and
Dr. Waterland, impudence. The
former translates the whole
verse thus: “The steadfastness
of their countenance witnesseth
against them: for their sin,
like Sodom, they publish, they
hide it not: wo to their souls!
for upon themselves have they
brought down evil.”
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 3:10-11. Say ye to the
righteous — O ye priests and
Levites, in your sermons and
exhortations to the people; that
it shall be well with him — Even
when it is ill with the wicked,
and with the nation in general;
for they shall eat the fruit of
their doings — God will be their
safeguard and portion in the
common calamity; therefore let
them not fear, but let them
commit themselves, and their
all, to his protection, and
resign themselves up to his
disposal. They shall either be
hid in the day of the Lord’s
anger, or shall have divine
supports and comforts, which
shall abound in proportion as
trials and troubles abound.
“This is an admirable sentence
to support the souls of the
pious, amidst all the calamities
of this life. God will not
forsake those who truly love and
serve him. This, reason teaches
us; this, the experience of all
times confirms; and it is the
constant and comfortable
doctrine of the word of God. The
event must and will be happy to
the good man.” Wo unto the
wicked, &c. — These heavy
judgments are designed against
them, and shall certainly find
them out, though here they be
mixed with the righteous. As
happiness, either in this world
or the next, is, by the divine
determination, the certain
consequence of righteousness, so
the contrary is the certain
consequence of wickedness.
Verse 12
Isaiah 3:12. As for my people —
In this and the following
verses, says Dr. Dodd, “the
prophet describes the incapacity
and weakness, the ignorance and
corruption, the oppression and
cruelty of the priests and
rulers of the people; such as we
learn from history they were
before the Babylonish
captivity.” Children are their
oppressors — Persons young in
years, of little experience, and
who have not due consideration,
but, following the impulse of
their passions, without regard
to any thing else, have the
power in their hands, which they
use at their pleasure, of
exacting tribute of the people;
and women rule over them — Weak
and effeminate rulers. Or,
perhaps he speaks of the wives
and concubines of their kings
and great men, who, by their
arts, gaining an ascendency over
their husbands, induced them to
act as they desired, though
frequently to the people’s
prejudice, and in a manner
contrary to all the laws. Thus
it was in the reign of Jehoram,
king of Judah, whose wife
Athaliah, a cruel and weak
woman, occasioned great
disorders in the state; see 2
Chronicles chap. 21. and 22.;
and thus undoubtedly it
frequently happened after the
time Isaiah uttered this
prophecy. They who lead thee —
Thy rulers, civil and
ecclesiastical, whose duty it is
to show thee the right way; or,
as מאשׁרין, may be properly
rendered, they that bless thee;
that is, thy false prophets, who
flatter thee, and speak, peace
to thee; cause thee to err —
From the way of truth and duty,
from the way of safety and
prosperity. Instead of leading
thee to repentance and
reformation, they encourage thee
to go on in sin and rebellion
against him, on whom thou art
dependant for all things. Those
teachers are indeed impostors,
that pronounce a people safe and
happy who continue in sin; for
it is contrary to the very
nature of things, that any
people can be happy who are
contemners of the divine laws.
Their punishment may be delayed,
but it is not therefore
remitted; and every step they
take in such a way is a step
toward misery and ruin. And
destroy the way of thy paths —
Keep thee from the knowledge or
practice of those paths which
lead to safety and happiness,
and mislead thee into evil
courses, by their wicked
counsels or examples.
Verses 13-15
Isaiah 3:13-15. The Lord
standeth up to plead — He will
shortly and certainly stand up
as a judge to inquire into the
cause, and to give sentence; and
standeth to judge the people —
To call the wicked into
judgment, and to denounce upon
them as they deserve; or to
defend and deliver his own
people, judging for them, as
this phrase often means. Will
enter into judgment with the
ancients — The princes or
rulers, as it is explained in
the next clause, often called
elders, because they were
commonly chosen from those that
were advanced in years. For ye
have eaten up the vineyard —
Destroyed, instead of preserving
and dressing it, as you should
have done. The church and
commonwealth of Israel is often
called God’s vineyard, and here
the vineyard, by way of
eminence, intrusted to the care
of these rulers. The spoil of
the poor is in your houses — The
goods which you have violently
taken away from them. What mean
ye that ye beat my people? —
What warrant have ye for it? How
durst you presume to do it? and
grind the faces of the poor — A
strong metaphor to denote
grievous oppression; but it is
exceeded by the Prophet Micah
3:1-3.
Verse 16
Isaiah 3:16. Moreover, the Lord
saith — After God had reproved
the rulers of the Jews for their
iniquity, injustice, and
rapacity in spoiling the people,
“he draws an argument of the
same kind from the pride and
luxury of the noble matrons and
virgins, whose ornaments,
collected from the spoils of the
people, were borne proudly and
insolently by them; upon whom
therefore he denounces
judgments; for of these two
parts consists this last period
of his reproving discourse:
urging, 1st, In this verse the
crimes of luxury and wanton
haughtiness; denouncing, 2d, The
punishment with which God would
pursue these crimes, Isaiah 3:17
to chap. 4:1:” see Vitringa and
Dodd. Because the daughters of
Zion are haughty — Proud and
disdainful; and walk with
stretched-forth necks —
Affecting stateliness, (Psalms
75:5,) and endeavouring to
appear tall; and wanton eyes —
Hebrew, משׂקרות, falsifying
their eyes; that is, falsely
setting off their eyes with
paint, as Bishop Lowth
translates it, observing that he
takes it to be the true meaning
and literal rendering of the
word; walking and mincing as
they go — Taking petty tripping
steps in their walking, that
they may appear the younger;
making a tinkling with their
feet — Dr. Waterland renders
this clause, and with chains, or
shackles, upon their feet. The
prophet is thought, by some
learned men, to “allude to a
custom among the eastern ladies
of wearing on their legs large
hollow rings, or circles, with
little rings hanging round them;
the cavities of these rings
being filled with small flints,
which caused them to sound like
bells on the least motion.”
Bishop Lowth translates the last
two clauses, “Mincing their
steps as they go, and with their
feet lightly tripping along.”
Verse 17
Isaiah 3:17. Therefore the Lord
will smite, &c. — Will humble
the head of the daughters of
Zion; and Jehovah will expose
their nakedness. Thus Bishop
Lowth renders the verse,
observing, that “it was the
barbarous custom of the
conquerors of those times to
strip their captives naked, and
to make them travel in that
condition, exposed to the
inclemency of the weather; and,
which was worst of all, to the
intolerable heat of the sun. But
this, to the women, was the
height of cruelty and indignity;
and especially to such as those
here described, who had indulged
themselves in all manner of
delicacies of living, and all
the superfluities of ornamental
dress; and even whose faces had
hardly ever been exposed to the
sight of man. This is always
mentioned as the hardest part of
the lot of captives. Nahum,
denouncing the fate of Nineveh,
paints it in very strong
colours,” Nahum 3:5-6.
Verse 18
Isaiah 3:18. In that day the
Lord, &c. — “Punishment, which,
though slow, always follows
vice, is here denounced upon the
luxurious and proud women:
first, taking away, not only the
ornaments, wherewith they set
off their beauty, but also their
garments, which were of
necessary use, to Isaiah 3:24;
secondly, deprivation of their
husbands and children, Isaiah
3:25-26; thirdly, the
consequence hereof, by which
this loss might be repaired,
Isaiah 4:1” see Vitringa. Will
take away the bravery of their
tinkling ornaments, &c. — It is
justly observed by a learned
commentator here, that the words
which describe the women’s
ornaments in this and the
following verses are of very
doubtful signification; the
modes of every age and country
varying so often, that the
succeeding fashion makes the
former to be quickly forgotten,
and the words that express it to
become obscure, or even
unintelligible. Probably a
hundred years hence the names of
some of the ornaments that are
now in use in our own land will
be as little understood as some
of those here named. It is
judged unnecessary and improper,
therefore, to trouble the reader
here with the different
interpretations which learned
men have given of them. It is
agreed by all, that they were
ornaments used by the women in
Judea at that time, and that
they were made the means of
increasing their pride and other
vices, and therefore were
displeasing to God. And it is of
no concern exactly to understand
the differences of them. Instead
therefore of spending time on
this barren subject, we shall
content ourselves with laying
before the reader Bishop Lowth’s
translation of the Hebrew terms
used to express them, with some
occasional observations which he
has made on some of the
articles. In that day will the
Lord take away from them the
ornaments of the feet-rings, and
the net-works, and the
crescents, Isaiah 3:18. The
pendents, and the bracelets, and
the thin veils, Isaiah 3:19. The
tires, and the fetters, and the
zones, and the perfume-boxes,
and the amulets, Isaiah 3:20.
The rings, and the jewels of the
nostril, Isaiah 3:21. Many
commentators explain this of
jewels, or strings of pearl,
hanging from the forehead, and
reaching to the upper part of
the nose. But it appears from
many passages of Holy Scripture,
that the phrase is to be
literally and properly
understood of nose-jewels, rings
set with jewels, hanging from
the nostrils, as ear-rings from
the ears, by holes bored to
receive them. Ezekiel,
enumerating the common ornaments
of women of the first rank, has
not omitted this particular, and
is to be understood in the same
manner, Ezekiel 16:11-12; see
also Genesis 24:47, and Proverbs
11:22.
Verses 22-24
Isaiah 3:22-24. The embroidered
robes, and the tunics, and the
cloaks, and the little purses,
Isaiah 3:22. The transparent
garments — A kind of silken
dress, transparent like gauze;
worn only by the most delicate
women, and such as dressed
themselves, as Sallust observes,
“elegantius quam necesse esset
probis,” more elegantly than was
necessary for modest women. This
sort of garments was afterward
in use among the Greeks. And the
fine linen vests; and the
turbans, and the mantles, Isaiah
3:23. And there shall be,
instead of perfume, a putrid
ulcer — A principal part of the
delicacy of the Asiatic ladies
consists in the use of baths,
and of the richest oils and
perfumes; an attention to which
is, in some degree, necessary in
those hot countries. Frequent
mention (as we have seen) is
made of the rich ointments of
the spouse in the Song of
Solomon; and the preparation for
Esther’s being introduced to
King Ahasuerus was a course of
bathing and perfuming for a
whole year; six months with oil
of myrrh, and six months with
sweet odours, Esther 2:12. A
diseased and loathsome habit of
body, instead of a beautiful
skin, softened and made
agreeable with all that art
could devise, and all that
nature, so prodigal, in those
countries, of the richest
perfumes, could supply, must
have been a punishment the most
severe and the most mortifying
to the delicacy of these haughty
daughters of Zion. And, instead
of well-girt raiment, rags; and,
instead of high- dressed hair,
baldness; and, instead of a
zone, a girdle of sackcloth: a
sun-burnt skin, instead of
beauty, Isaiah 3:24.
Verse 25-26
Isaiah 3:25-26. Thy men shall
fall, &c. — We have in these
verses the second evil; the
desolation and widowhood of the
matrons and virgins: see
Lamentations 2:21-22. But we
must observe, that the prophet
here does not address the women
themselves, but Zion, which
frequently is spoken of and
represented in the character of
a woman. Her gates shall lament
— The gates of Zion, which, by a
figure, are said to lament, to
imply the great desolation of
the place, that there would be
no people to go out and come in
by them, or to meet together
there as they used to do. And
she, being desolate — Bereaved
of her children; Hebrew, נקתה,
emptied, or cleansed, that is,
deprived of all that she had
held dear, and delighted in;
shall sit upon the ground — In
the posture of a mourner,
bewailing her sad calamity.
Sitting on the ground, the
reader will observe, was a
posture denoting deep distress:
see on Job 2:13. The Prophet
Jeremiah has noticed it, in the
first place, among many
indications of sorrow, in an
elegant description of this same
state of distress of his
country, Lamentations 2:8-10.
Thus also the psalmist, By the
rivers of Babylon, there we sat
down, yea, we wept when we
remembered Zion. For,
undoubtedly, Isaiah in this
prophecy had in his view, at
least first and immediately, the
destruction of Jerusalem by
Nebuchadnezzar, and the
dissolution of the Jewish state
under the captivity of Babylon.
His prediction, however,
received a second, and still
more awful accomplishment, in
the destruction of that city and
nation by the Romans. And, what
is remarkable, in a medal coined
by Vespasian’s order, Jerusalem
is represented, according to the
picture drawn of her here by the
prophet, as lamenting that
calamity, under the emblem of a
woman sitting on the ground in a
melancholy and mournful posture. |