Verse 1
Isaiah 5:1. Now will I sing, &c.
— Bishop Lowth translates this
clause, “Let me sing now a song
to my beloved; a song of loves
concerning his vineyard.” This
is the exordium, a kind of title
placed before the song; which
song he records, as Moses did
his, that it might be a witness
for God, and against Israel. The
beloved, to whom the prophet
addresses the song, is the Lord
of the vineyard, as appears by
the latter clause of the verse,
namely, God, or his Messiah,
whom the prophet loved and
served, and for whose glory,
eclipsed by the barrenness of
the vineyard, he was greatly
concerned: a song of my beloved
— Not devised by me, but
inspired by God, which,
therefore, it behooveth you to
lay deeply to heart: touching
his vineyard — The house of
Israel, (Isaiah 5:7,) or his
church among the Israelites,
often, and very properly, called
a vineyard, because of God’s
singular regard to it, and care
and cultivation of it; his
delight in it, and expectation
of good fruit from it. My
beloved hath, &c. — Hebrew,
לידידי היה כרם, my beloved hath
had a vineyard, namely, for many
ages, with which he hath long
taken great pains, and on which
he hath bestowed much culture;
in a very fruitful hill —
Hebrew, on a horn, the son of
oil, “an expression,” says
Bishop Lowth, “highly
descriptive and poetical.”
According to Kimchi the prophet
gives the land of Israel this
appellation because of its
height and fertility.
Accordingly, the bishop renders
the phrase, on a high and
fruitful hill, observing, that
“the parts of animals are, by an
easy metaphor, applied to parts
of the earth, both in common and
poetical language. A promontory
is called a cape, or head; the
Turks call it a nose; a ridge of
rocks, a back, (‘dorsum immane
mari summo, a huge back in the
deep sea;’ Virg.) Thus a horn is
a proper and obvious image for a
mountain, or mountainous
country.” Hills are places most
commodious for vines, and the
hills of Canaan being very
fertile, the phrase, son of oil,
is added to express that
circumstance, both because oil
includes the idea of fatness,
and because oil-olive was one of
the most valued productions of
that land. Indeed the word horn
also is frequently used in
Scripture as an emblem of
plenty, their wealth consisting
very much in their herds, as
well as flocks.
Verse 2
Isaiah 5:2. And he fenced it —
In this verse the prophet,
carrying on the allegory,
proceeds to express, in
parabolical language, the
singular favours which God had
bestowed on the Jewish nation,
and the peculiar care which he
had taken of them. He separated
them from other nations, took
them into covenant with himself,
gave them a variety of laws and
ordinances respecting his
worship and service, and became,
in an especial manner, their
protector and governor. Thus he
fenced his vineyard; Hebrew,
יעזקהו, circumsepsit eam, hedged
it round on all sides. In
removing the heathen nations,
and destroying all the forms of
their idolatrous worship,
forbidding all idolatry, and all
intimate friendship and
intermarriages with idolaters,
and by giving them plain and
ample directions for their whole
conduct, lest they should fall
by error or mistake, he gathered
out the stones thereof — Which
otherwise might have marred the
land, (2 Kings 3:19,) and
injured the vines. In other
words, he removed all the
hinderances of fruitfulness. In
that he formed his church of the
posterity of those wise, holy,
and faithful men, Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, and purged and
reformed the nation in the
wilderness before he established
them in Canaan, he might truly
be said to plant his vineyard
with the choicest vine — Or, as
the Hebrew is, the vine of Sorek,
alluding to a valley between
Ascalon and Gaza, running up
eastward into the tribe of
Judah, and famous for the best
vines, and the richest
vineyards. And he built a tower
in the midst of it — As
edifices, termed towers by the
Jews, were erected in vineyards,
containing, as Bishop Lowth
supposes, “all the offices and
implements, and the whole
apparatus necessary for the
culture of them, and the making
of wine;” and, doubtless, also
serving for the accommodation
and defence of the labourers;
and as places of pleasure for
the owners of the vineyards; so
God provided his church with a
most commodious and magnificent
temple, furnished with all
conveniences for every part of
that worship and service which
he required his people to
perform to him, and affording
every requisite accommodation
for the residence, support, and
comfort of the priests and
Levites, while ministering in
holy things, and employed in
cultivating God’s mystical
vineyard; and where he, the Lord
of the vineyard, might be
peculiarly present, as the
protector and consolation of his
people, their refuge and
strength, and very present help
in times of trouble or danger.
Thus the Chaldee paraphrast: “I
have constituted them the plant
of a choice vine, and built my
sanctuary in the midst of them.”
So also Jerome interprets the
clause. He also made a
wine-press therein — Hebrew, וגם
יקב חצב, which Bishop Lowth
properly translates, “And he
hewed out also a lake therein;”
observing that the word יקבmeans,
not the wine-press itself, or
calcatorium, (the vessel or
place where the grapes were
stamped, or trod for the wine,
which is expressed by another
word,) but “what the Romans
called lacus, the lake; the
large open place or vessel,
which, by a conduit, or spout,
received the must (or new wine)
from the wine-press.” This
place, he thinks, in very hot
countries, it was necessary, or
very convenient, to have under
ground, or in a cave hewed out
of the side of a rock, “for
coolness; that the heat might
not cause too great a
fermentation, and sour the
must.” Now this lake, made to
contain the new wine, may here
signify the great altar, made to
receive the sacrifices and
oblations, as the fruits of the
spiritual vineyard. And he
looked that it should bring
forth grapes — Real, genuine
fruit, true, substantial piety
and virtue, or godliness and
righteousness; and it brought
forth wild grapes — Or, rather,
poisonous berries, as Bishop
Lowth translates באשׁים, the
word here used, which does not
signify “merely useless,
unprofitable grapes, such as
wild grapes; but grapes
offensive to the smell, noxious,
poisonous;” such as those
mentioned 2 Kings 4:39-41. For,
according to the force and
intent of the allegory, “To good
grapes ought to be opposed fruit
of a dangerous and pernicious
quality; as, in the explication
of it, to judgment is opposed
tyranny, and to righteousness
oppression.” See an elegant
paraphrase of this part of the
parable, Jeremiah 2:21.
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 5:3-4. And now, O
inhabitants of Jerusalem, &c. —
God is here introduced as
calling upon the guilty
themselves to pass sentence, or
judgment, in the case, and
leaving it to them; because,
without downright madness, they
could do no other than condemn
themselves; who, when they had
received so many benefits from
God, had been so ungrateful to
him. What could have been done,
&c. — What work is there
belonging to the office of an
owner or keeper of a vineyard,
which I have neglected?
Wherefore — brought it forth
wild grapes — How unworthy a
conduct and inexcusable a crime
is it, that you not only have
been unfruitful in good works,
but have brought forth, in
abundance, the fruits of
wickedness!
Who can read these words without
being moved at the justness as
well as the tenderness of the
reproach; which is equally
applicable now to professing
Christians in general, as it was
to the Jews at that time? What
is it that God has not done for
us? What good thing has he
withheld from us? How many
invaluable blessings has he
bestowed upon us in our creation
and preservation! And how many
still more inestimable in our
redemption!
What more could have been done
for us than he has done?
Wherefore then, when he looketh
for grapes, does he only find
wild grapes, or rather poisonous
berries? When he looketh for a
tribute of grateful praise, does
he find ingratitude,
forgetfulness of his mercies,
and disobedience to his
commands?
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 5:5-6. And now I will
tell you, &c. — He graciously
warns them beforehand, that they
may have space and encouragement
to repent, and so to prevent the
threatened miseries. I will take
away the hedge thereof, &c. — I
will withdraw my presence and
protection from you, and give
you up into the hands of your
enemies. I will lay it waste —
It shall be overrun by heathen
and infidels, and shall no
longer bear the form of a
vineyard. It shall not be pruned
nor digged — Vine-dressers used
to dig up and open the earth
about the roots of the vines.
The meaning is, I will remove my
ministers, who have used great
care and diligence to make you
fruitful: but there shall come
up briers and thorns — I will
give you up to your own wicked
lusts. I will also command the
clouds — I will deprive you of
all my blessings.
Verse 7
Isaiah 5:7. For the vineyard,
&c. — Or rather, Now the
vineyard, as Dr. Waterland
renders it: here we have the
interpretation of the preceding
parable in general. In the
subsequent verses the prophet
enters into particulars. This
general interpretation is fully
verified by the history of the
Jewish people, especially in the
time of our Lord and his
apostles: and the men of Judah
his pleasant plant — In whom God
formerly delighted; and he
looked for judgment — Both the
administration of justice by
magistrates, and justice in the
dealings of the people with one
another: but behold oppression —
From the powerful upon their
inferiors; and for righteousness
— For equity, mercy, and
benevolence; but behold a cry —
From the oppressed, crying to
men for help, and to God for
vengeance. “The paronomasia, or
play on the words, in the
Hebrew, in this place, is very
remarkable; mispat, mispach;
zedakah, zeakah. There are many
examples of it in the other
prophets; but Isaiah seems
peculiarly fond of it. The
rabbins esteem it a great
beauty: their term for it is,
elegance of language.” — Bishop
Lowth.
Verses 8-10
Isaiah 5:8-10. Wo unto them, &c.
— The unfolding of the parable,
after the general key in the
preceding verse, comprehends two
things, according to the
argument of the parable; the
crimes of this ungrateful
people, and the punishment
decreed to their crimes. That
join house to house — That add
new purchases of houses and
lands to their former
possessions. Not that this was
in itself absolutely unlawful,
but because they did it from an
inordinate desire of riches, and
with the injury of their
brethren. That they may be
placed alone — That they alone
may be the lords and owners, and
all others only their tenants
and servants. Thus, “the first
crime condemned is avarice and
rapacity; which is strongly
described in this verse, and
which prevailed remarkably among
the Jews. Its punishment, even
the desolation of those houses
which they coveted, and the
devastation of those fields
which they obtained so
rapaciously, is set forth in the
two following verses.” See
Vitringa. In mine ears, said the
Lord — That is, It was revealed
in mine ears: or, I heard God
speak what I am now about to
utter. Of a truth many houses
shall be desolate — “In vain are
ye so intent upon joining house
to house, and field to field;
your houses shall be left
uninhabited, and your fields
shall become desolate and
barren: so that a vineyard of
ten acres shall produce but one
bath (not eight gallons) of
wine, and the husbandman shall
reap but a tenth part of the
seed which he has sown.” —
Bishop Lowth. Thus it is
predicted that a fruitful land
should be made barren for their
wickedness, according to God’s
threatening, (Psalms 107:34,)
and they would have as little
comfort in their lands as in
their houses.
Verse 11-12
Isaiah 5:11-12. Wo unto them,
that rise up early, &c. — Here
we find another vice reproved,
namely, that of luxury, or
intemperance; whose companion
and daughter is Inattention to
the works of God, whose child,
also, is Ignorance; see Isaiah
5:13; that rise up early to
follow strong drink — As
husbandmen and tradesmen rise
early to follow their
employments; as if they were
afraid of losing time from that
which is the greatest
misspending of time and the most
sinful abuse of it. That
continue until night — Spending
the whole day at their cups;
till wine inflame them — Inflame
their lusts and passions: for
chambering and wantonness, on
the one hand, and contentions
and wounds without cause, on the
other, generally follow upon
rioting, and drunkenness, Romans
13:13; Proverbs 23:29. And the
harp, and the viol, &c., are in
their feasts — Musical
instruments of all sorts must
accompany their wine, that every
sense may be gratified to the
utmost, and their pleasures
rendered more exquisite. But
they regard not the work of the
Lord — What God hath lately
done, and is yet doing, and
about to do, among them; his
grievous judgments, partly
inflicted, and partly
threatened, which require
another course of life, even to
give themselves to fasting and
prayer, and to reform their
manners, that so they might
remove the calamities which, now
afflicted them, and prevent
those which were approaching.
Verse 13-14
Isaiah 5:13-14. Therefore the
people are gone into captivity —
The prophet may refer to those
carried captive in the time of
Ahaz: see on Isaiah 2:20. Or his
words may be rendered, the
people go into, &c.; that is,
shall certainly and shortly go,
speaking of the approaching
judgments as if they were
already come. Because they have
no knowledge — No serious
consideration of God’s works,
and of their own duty and
danger. And their honourable men
are famished — Who thought
themselves quite out of the
reach of famine. Therefore hell
hath enlarged herself — The
grave, or the place of torment
to which certainly the souls of
such persons must descend; and
opened her mouth without measure
—
To receive those vast numbers
which die by this famine, or
otherwise, as is here implied.
The prophet is thought to allude
“to the form of the ancient
sepulchres, which were
subterraneous caverns hollowed
out of a rock, the mouth of
which was generally closed by a
great stone. The prosopopœia is
extremely fine and expressive,
and the image is fraught with
the most tremendous horror.” And
their glory, &c. — Their nobles,
or honourable men, as they are
called, Isaiah 5:13, being
distinguished, both here and
there, from the multitude; and
their pomp — Which shall die
with them; and he that rejoiceth
— That spendeth all his days in
mirth and jollity, and casteth
away all cares and fears; shall
descend into it — Not only into
the grave, but into hell. Bishop
Lowth’s translation of this
verse is peculiarly striking:
“Therefore Hades hath enlarged
his appetite; And hath stretched
open his mouth without measure:
And down go her nobility, and
her populace, And her busy
throng, and all that exult in
her.”
“These verses,” (13 and 14,) he
justly observes, “have a
reference to the two preceding.
They that indulged in feasting
and drinking, shall perish with
hunger and thirst: and Hades”
(the invisible world, hell
prepared to receive these
sinners that live and die in
sin) “shall indulge his appetite
as much as they had done, and
devour them all. The image is
strong and expressive in the
highest degree. Habakkuk uses
the same image with great force,
chap. 2:5. But in Isaiah, Hades
is introduced, to much greater
advantage, in person; and placed
before our eyes as a ravenous
monster, opening wide his
unmeasurable jaws, and
swallowing them all together.”
Verses 15-17
Isaiah 5:15-17. And the mean
man, &c. — All of them, both
high and low, shall be brought
to destruction. But the Lord
shall be exalted in judgment —
By the execution of his just
judgment upon his incorrigible
enemies. And God that is holy
shall be sanctified — Shall
appear to be a holy God; in
righteousness — That is, by
displaying his righteousness, or
executing his righteous
judgments. Then, &c. — When God
shall have finished that work of
judgment upon the ungodly, he
will extend mercy to the
remainder; the lambs — The poor
and harmless people, who shall
be left in the land, when the
rich are carried into captivity,
as it happened 2 Kings 25:12;
shall feed after their manner —
Or, without restraint, as Bishop
Lowth renders it. And the waste
places of the fat ones — The
lands left by their owners, the
rich and great men, who were
either slain or carried into
captivity; shall strangers eat —
The poor Israelites who were
left in the land to be
vine-dressers and husbandmen,
who are called strangers,
because they were so in
reference to that land, not
being the proper owners of it,
nor related to them. Vitringa is
of opinion that this verse
“refers to the first disciples
of Jesus Christ, who, seeing and
deploring the destruction of the
Jews, should rest safely under
the protection of God; while,
according to the next clause,
the Gentiles should be brought
into the communion of the
church, and rejoice in those
benefits, prerogatives, and
privileges, whereof the carnal,
rich, and luxurious Jews were
deprived.” See John 10:16.
Verse 18-19
Isaiah 5:18-19. Wo unto them
that draw iniquity — That are
not only drawn to sin by the
allurements of the world, or by
the persuasions of wicked men,
but are active and industrious
in drawing sin to themselves, or
themselves to sin: with cords of
vanity — Or, of lying, as the
word שׁואfrequently signifies;
that is, with vain and deceitful
arguments and pretences, whereby
sinners generally draw
themselves to sin, such as, That
God does not regard human
affairs; that many of the
greatest sinners often go
unpunished; that we see no
proofs of the divine
interposition, &c. See 2 Peter
3:3-4. And sin with a cart-rope
— With all their might, as
beasts that draw carts with
ropes. That say, Let him make
speed — Namely, God, in whose
name thou and other prophets are
always reproving and threatening
us; and hasten his work, that we
may see it — He only thinks to
affright us, as if we were fools
or children, with bugbears, or
pretended evils: he either
cannot, or will not, do us any
harm. This was the plain
language of their actions; they
lived as if they were of this
opinion. And let the counsel of
the Holy One draw nigh — What
you have declared to be his
counsel, with regard to our
going into captivity, and which,
you say, his holiness obliges
him to execute: they scornfully
repeat the title of Holy One,
usually given by the prophets to
God. And come, that we may know
it — We cannot believe that it
will ever happen unless we see
it with our eyes. Thus, “by a
long progression in iniquity,
and a continued accumulation of
sin, men arrive at length to the
highest degree of wickedness;
bidding open defiance to God,
and scoffing at his threatened
judgments;” to which they cannot
be persuaded to give any credit
till they find them executed
upon them.
Verse 20
Isaiah 5:20. Wo unto them that
call evil good, and good evil —
That endeavour to confound both
the names and the natures of
virtue and vice, of piety and
impiety; commend and applaud
what is evil, and disparage and
discountenance what is good;
that put darkness for light, and
light for darkness, &c. —
Ignorance and error, for
knowledge and truth: in other
words, who subvert, or pervert,
all the great principles of
truth, wisdom, and of
righteousness. A most corrupt
condition of a church and state
is that indeed, “in which men,
accustomed to vices, begin, with
the things themselves, to lose
also the names of them, and to
draw a veil, as it were, over
their impieties, by sanctifying
their crimes with the names of
virtues.” This reproof of the
prophet supposes, that the
difference between good and
evil, sin and holiness, is as
self-evident as that between the
most contrary qualities which we
are informed of by the report of
our senses: and that the
advantage which light hath above
darkness does not shine out with
a brighter evidence than the
pre-eminence which virtue hath
above vice, righteousness above
unrighteousness. See Lowth.
Verse 21
Isaiah 5:21. Wo unto them that
are wise in their own eyes —
Who, being puffed up with a high
opinion of their own wisdom,
despise the counsels and
instructions of Jehovah by his
prophets, and prefer their own
vain imaginations before the
decisions of infinite wisdom.
Verse 24
Isaiah 5:24. Therefore as the
fire, &c. — “The latter part of
the parabolic song, contained in
Isaiah 5:6, begins here to be
more fully explained; and, to
the end of the chapter, we have
an account of that total
destruction of the republic,
which was to be brought upon it
by a people most skilful in war,
and coming from a very distant
country.” The greatness and
impelling cause of this
threatened destruction are
explained in this and the
following verse: the instruments
of it, a fierce and warlike
people, are described Isaiah
5:26-29. And the consequence of
it, the trouble and desperation
of those that remained from this
slaughter, Isaiah 5:30. See
Vitringa. Their root shall be as
rottenness — They shall be like
a tree, which not only withers
in its branches, but dies and
rots at the roots, and therefore
is past all hopes of recovery.
That is, they shall be
destroyed, both root and branch,
and that as certainly and
irresistibly as fire devours the
stubble on which it kindles, and
the flame consumes the chaff
which it touches. Their blossom
shall go up as dust — Shall
vanish as the dust, which is
blown away with every wind, or
shall be resolved into dust, and
yield no fruit; because they
have cast away the law of the
Lord, &c. — Have cast off all
obedience to it, and treated it
with contempt.
Verse 25
Isaiah 5:25. Therefore is the
anger of the Lord kindled — This
implies that, before the time of
that final vengeance, concerning
which the prophecy principally
treats, God had afflicted, or,
rather, would afflict and
chastise this rebellious people,
with the most grievous
calamities: that those
calamities should consume many,
who, being slain in the wars,
should be trod upon by their
enemies, like the dung in the
streets; most certain
indications these of the divine
justice and wrath, while they,
unawakened by these
chastisements, would not so much
as attempt to appease the divine
displeasure, but would provoke
it still more by repeated
crimes; till, at length, it
should come upon them to the
uttermost. — Vitringa. And the
hills did tremble — A
metaphorical and hyperbolical
description of a grievous
calamity, familiar to the
prophets: see the margin. For
all this, his anger is not
turned away, &c. — This is not
the end, as you vainly imagine,
but, if you repent not, only the
beginning of your sorrows, and
an earnest of further miseries.
Verse 26
Isaiah 5:26. And he will lift up
an ensign to the nations — To
call them together for his
service. Here that decree of the
divine severity, which had been
spoken of in general terms in
Isaiah 5:24, is explained. God
is shown to be the supreme
general or leader of the people,
which were to come from far to
execute his vengeance; they were
to assemble at his setting up
his ensign as a signal; and at
his hissing — A metaphor taken
from the practice of persons
keeping bees; who used to draw
them out of their hives into the
fields, and lead them back
again, συρισμασι, by hissing,
whistling, or some sounds of
that kind; as Cyril, Theodoret,
and Bochart have shown. The
meaning is, that God would
collect the people, like bees,
by the slightest indication of
his will, and bring them into
Judea to execute his vengeance.
— Bishop Lowth and Dodd. It is
not expressed particularly from
whence they should be brought,
but only said in general, 1st,
That they should come from far —
Which may be applied, either to
the Assyrians, spoken of under
this same character, (Isaiah
10:3,) and who, not long after,
invaded Judea, and did much
mischief in it; or to the
Chaldeans, even Babylon being
called a far country, Isaiah
39:3. 2d, That they should come
from the ends of the earth — An
expression hardly applicable
either to the Assyrians or
Chaldeans, but which exactly
agrees to the Romans, and which
undoubtedly received its final
and most perfect accomplishment
in the destruction brought on
the Jews by them. In saying,
they shall come with speed
swiftly, the prophet refers to
Isaiah 5:19. As the scoffers had
challenged God to make speed,
and to hasten his work of
vengeance, so now they are
assured, that with speed, and
swiftly, it shall come.
Verses 27-29
Isaiah 5:27-29. None, &c. — In
these verses the prophet
describes the quality of the
forces which should come against
Jerusalem; their vigour,
activity, and diligence, Isaiah
5:27; their military expedition,
readiness, skilfulness, and
apparatus, Isaiah 5:28; their
fortitude and undaunted courage,
Isaiah 5:29; for all which
particulars the Romans were
remarkably eminent. — Dodd. None
shall be weary — Though their
march be long and tedious. As I
have called them to this work,
so I will assist them in it.
None shall slumber nor sleep —
They shall all be watchful and
diligent to take all
opportunities of executing my
judgments. Nor the latchet, &c.,
be broken — I will take all
impediments out of their way.
Whose arrows are sharp — Who are
every way furnished and ready
for my work, waiting only for my
command. Their horses’ hoofs
like flint — Because they shall
not be broken or battered by the
length or stoniness and
ruggedness of the way. And their
wheels like a whirlwind — For
the swiftness of their march,
and for the force and violence
of their chariots in battle.
They shall roar like young lions
— Which signifies both their
cruelty, and their eagerness to
catch and devour the prey. They
shall lay hold on the prey, &c.
— These words do not agree to
the Assyrians, for they were
forced to retreat with great
shame and loss, and the Jews
were delivered from them: but
they agree perfectly both to the
Chaldeans and the Romans, both
of whom carried the prey away
safe, and none delivered it —
That is, neither the Jews
themselves, nor any of their
confederates, to whose help they
trusted.
Verse 30
Isaiah 5:30. And in that day,
&c. — “Here Isaiah closes this
prophecy, with a strong and
eloquent description of the
consequences of this calamity;
setting forth, in the most
emphatical terms, the utter
confusion, blackness, and
desperation of the miserable
Jews.” See Isaiah 8:22. They
shall roar against them like the
roaring of the sea — Which is
violent and frightful; and if
one look, &c., behold, darkness
and sorrow — Darkness, that is,
sorrow: the latter word explains
the former. Every thing looks
black and dismal. And the light
is darkened in the heavens
thereof — When they look up to
the heavens, as men in distress
usually do, they see no light
there. Their comforts are wholly
eclipsed, and their hopes like
the giving up of the ghost. It
must be observed, that the
Scriptures frequently express
great calamities and changes, in
states and churches, by the
heavens being darkened, and the
sun, moon, and stars withdrawing
their light, or falling from
heaven. |