Verse 1
Isaiah 7:1. And it came to pass
in the days of Ahaz — Of whose
idolatries and abominable
wickedness the reader will find
a particular account, 2
Chronicles 28:1-4. Rezin and
Pekah went up toward Jerusalem —
“The confederacy of these two
kings against the kingdom of
Judah was formed in the time of
Jotham; and perhaps the effects
of it were felt in the latter
part of his reign. See 2 Kings
15:37. However, in the very
beginning of the reign of Ahaz,
they jointly invaded Judah with
a powerful army, and threatened
to destroy, or to dethrone the
house of David. The king and
royal family being in the utmost
consternation on receiving
advices of their designs, Isaiah
is sent to them to support and
comfort them in their present
distress, by assuring them that
God would make good his promises
to David and his house. This
makes the subject of this and
the following chapter, and the
beginning of the ninth.” But
could not prevail against it —
That is, against Jerusalem. But
yet they carried away a
multitude of captives out of
Judea, slew a vast number of the
people, and Rezin restored Elah
to his own dominions. See notes
on 2 Kings 16:5, and on 2
Chronicles 28:5-6.
Verse 2
Isaiah 7:2. And it was told the
house of David — Ahaz and his
royal relations and courtiers.
He calls them the house of
David, to intimate that the
following comfortable message
was sent to Ahaz, not for his
own sake, but only for the sake
of his worthy progenitor David,
to whom God had promised an
everlasting kingdom. Syria is
confederate with Ephraim — With
the kingdom of the ten tribes,
commonly called Ephraim, because
that tribe was by far the most
numerous and potent of them. And
his heart was moved — Namely,
the heart of Ahaz; and the heart
of his people — With excessive
fear, arising partly from a
consciousness of their own
guilt, whereby they had put
themselves out of God’s
protection; and partly from the
consideration of the great
strength and power of their
enemies.
Verse 3
Isaiah 7:3. Then said the Lord
unto Isaiah — This fifth
discourse, delivered as
immediately from the Lord, which
extends from hence to the end of
chap. 12., is of a very mixed
and various argument. It may be
divided into five parts: the
first contained in this chapter;
the second from Isaiah 8:1, to
Isaiah 9:7; the third from
Isaiah 9:7, to Isaiah 10:5; the
fourth from Isaiah 10:5, to the
end of that chapter; and the
fifth is contained in the
eleventh and twelfth chapters.
The first part of this prophecy,
which foretells the invasion of
Judea by the Ephraimites, the
Syrians, and Assyrians, contains
a kind of introduction to the
subsequent prophecies in this
discourse. Its design is
two-fold; first, to comfort the
pious in Jerusalem, amidst this
great calamity which threatened
their nation, and to testify the
singular providence of God
toward the house of David, which
he had hitherto preserved, and
would continue to preserve till
the completion of his great
design: and, secondly, to
upbraid the folly and
ingratitude of Ahaz. See
Vitringa. Go forth now to meet
Ahaz — Here we have an eminent
instance of God’s preventing
mercy toward one who neither
inquired of him, nor sought his
help. Thus God is often found of
those who seek him not: much
more will he be found of those
who seek him diligently! And
Shear-jashub thy son — Whose
very name, signifying, A remnant
shall return, carried in it a
sign and pledge of the promised
deliverance. At the end of the
conduit — Whither he probably
went to take care about the
waters which thence were brought
into the city, to secure them to
himself, or keep them from the
enemy, as Hezekiah afterward
did, 2 Chronicles 32:3-4.
Verse 4
Isaiah 7:4. Say unto him, Take
heed, and be quiet — Settle thy
mind by the belief of that
joyful message which I am now to
deliver to thee from the Lord;
Fear not for the two tails, &c.
— These two kings and their
forces, which, though they seem
to threaten utter destruction,
yet shall not be able to do much
mischief, being not whole
fire-brands, but only small
pieces or ends of them, taken
out of the fire, in which there
is more smoke than fire: and the
fire will be speedily
extinguished. They have more of
show and terror than of
strength, their power being much
wasted and almost consumed. He
terms the king of Israel, the
son of Remaliah, by way of
contempt, intimating that he was
unworthy of the name of king,
his father being an obscure
person, and he having got into
the throne by usurpation, and
the murder of his master
Pekahiah, 2 Kings 15:25.
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 7:5-6. Syria and Ephraim
have taken evil, or mischievous
counsel, saying, Let us go up
against Judah, and vex it —
Hebrew, נקיצנה, harass, weary,
or distress it; and make a
breach therein — Violently break
in upon the land, or break their
power and kingdom, and subdue it
to ourselves; and set a king in
the midst of it — Or viceroy,
that shall act by our authority;
even the son of Tabeal — Some
considerable captain, in whose
fidelity both of them had great
confidence; but whether he was
an Israelite or Syrian is
uncertain, and not material.
Verses 7-9
Isaiah 7:7-9. It shall not stand
— Namely, their evil counsel.
For the head of Syria is
Damascus — As if he had said, As
Damascus is the head city of
Syria, and Rezin is the head, or
king, of Damascus, so shall they
continue to be, and not advance
themselves, and enlarge their
territories, by possessing
themselves of Jerusalem and the
kingdom of Judah as they design.
Rezin shall be kept within his
own bounds, and be head of
Damascus only. And, in a similar
sense, (Isaiah 7:9,) Samaria
shall continue to be the chief
city of the kingdom of Israel,
and Pekah shall not conquer
Jerusalem as he hopes to do. The
Hebrew particle כי, however,
which introduces this passage,
instead of being tendered for,
may, with propriety, be
translated though, as it
frequently is, (see Joshua
17:18; 1 Samuel 14:39,) and then
the meaning will be, Though the
head of Syria be Damascus, and
the head of Damascus Rezin, and
the head of Ephraim be Samaria,
&c., yet within threescore and
five years shall Ephraim be
broken, &c. In this sense Bishop
Lowth understands the words,
joining the first clause of the
ninth verse to the first of the
eighth, judging that, by some
means, a transposition of it has
taken place, which seems very
probable. As to the
chronological difficulty, which
has embarrassed commentators in
this place, the best solution
seems to be that of Archbishop
Usher, (see his Annals of the
Old Testament, A.M. 3327,) who
explains the latter clause of
Isaiah 7:8, not of the first
captivity of the ten tribes by
Shalmaneser, but of their final
deportation by Esar-haddon, who
totally dispeopled the land, and
brought new inhabitants from
Babylon, Cuthah, and other
cities of the Assyrians, to
inhabit the cities of Israel.
See Ezra 4:2, compared with 2
Kings 17:24. “Compute,” says
Bishop Newton, who adopts this
explication, “sixty-five years
in the reigns of Ahaz, Hezekiah,
and Manasseh, and the end of
them will fall about the
twenty-second year of Manasseh;
when Esar-haddon, king of
Assyria, made the last
deportation of the Israelites,
and planted other nations in
their stead, and in the same
expedition probably took
Manasseh captive, and carried
him to Babylon, 2 Chronicles
33:11. Ephraim was broken from
being a kingdom before; but now
he was broken from being a
people, and from that time to
this what account can be given
of the people of Israel, as
distinct from the people of
Judah?” On the Prophecies, vol.
1. p. 204. This interpretation
of the passage is also approved
by Bishop Lowth. It may seem
strange, at first sight, that
the prophet, who here foretels
the entire destruction of
Ephraim, should say nothing
about the Syrians. But the
Syrians were now in confederacy
with Ephraim, and therefore what
is here said of one may be well
supposed to be spoken of both;
and that the destruction of
both, at or near the same time,
is indicated. In fact, the
Syrians and Israelites were such
near neighbours, that the
Israelites could scarcely be
invaded by a foreign army,
without Syria being subdued. If
ye will not believe, &c. — If ye
will not believe what I now
speak to you in the name of God;
if ye will not put confidence in
him, but, distrusting his
providence, will seek to the
Assyrians for succour; ye shall
not be established — Or,
preserved in your possessions,
any more than the Syrians or
Israelites: your state, whether
political or ecclesiastical,
shall not be upheld and
confirmed; but ye shall be
distressed and consumed by those
to whom you seek for help: the
accomplishment of which
threatening is recorded 2
Chronicles 28:20. The design of
the prophet was to raise up
their fainting minds to a
reliance on God, rather than on
the king of Assyria. See a
passage very like this, 2
Chronicles 20:20.
Verses 10-12
Isaiah 7:10-12. The Lord spake
again unto Ahaz — Namely, by
Isaiah. “From hence to Isaiah
7:16, we have the confirmation
of the promise, by a sign to
Ahaz, in the name of God; in
which we have, first, the
prophet’s address to Ahaz,
exhorting him, by the divine
command, to ask whatever sign he
would, with the reply of Ahaz,
Isaiah 7:10-12 : and, secondly,
a declaration of God’s good
pleasure to give an illustrious
sign, which he offers rather to
the true believers than to a
hypocritical and incredulous
king, Isaiah 7:13-16.” Through
the strong and forcible
objections which some learned
men have made against applying
the prophecy contained in these
verses to Christ, in its primary
sense, Huetius, Grotius, and
some other commentators, have
been led to suppose that it
immediately related to the birth
of a child in a natural way, and
that it only refers in a
secondary sense to the birth of
Christ. Thus Bishop Lowth
observes, “The obvious, literal
meaning of the prophecy, not
excluding a higher secondary
sense, is this: ‘That, within
the time that a young woman, now
a virgin, should conceive, and
bring forth a child, and that
child should arrive at such an
age as to distinguish between
good and evil, that is, within a
few years,
(compare Isaiah 8:4,) the
enemies of Judah should be
destroyed.’” But, surely, as Dr.
Doddridge observes, on Matthew
1:23, “A son’s being born of
one, then a virgin, when she was
married, was no such miraculous
event as to answer such a
pompous introduction” as we have
here. Of this the reader may
easily judge by attending to the
prophet’s words, and a short and
easy paraphrase upon them. Ask
thee a sign of the Lord thy God
— A sign is a miracle wrought
for the confirmation of some
message, promise, or doctrine
delivered from God. “Some
unusual or extraordinary effect,
production, or phenomenon, which
could not be explained from
natural causes, but only from
the omnipotence of the Ruler of
the universe; which, moreover,
signified that God was present,
and ratified the word, or
declaration, for which the sign
was given.” See Exodus 4:8;
6:17; Isaiah 38:22. Ask it
either in the depth, or in the
height above — Demand some
prodigy to be wrought, either in
earth or heaven, at thy
pleasure. By speaking thus, the
prophet signified that “all
nature was subject to the power
and control of that God, whom he
calls the God of Ahaz, as being
the God of his fathers, and in
order to admonish him wherein to
place his confidence.” But Ahaz
said, I will not ask — This
refusal did not proceed from
faith in God and true humility,
but rather from his contempt of
God, and disregard of his word,
as is sufficiently evident from
the history of his life. He
probably feared lest, if such a
sign should be given as he did
not choose, he should be
compelled to desist from his
purpose of calling in the aid of
Assyria, which he could not well
have called in after Jehovah had
given a sign to the contrary.
Besides, he did not dare to
commit himself to that divine
favour and providence, which he
had heretofore so proudly
despised; preferring to it the
protection of other and false
deities. See Vitringa. Neither
will I tempt the Lord — By
distrusting his providence, or
asking a sign, as if I
questioned the truth of his
word. But this was deep
hypocrisy, as appears by the
prophet’s answer.
Verse 13-14
Isaiah 7:13-14. And he said,
Hear now, O house of David — The
prophet no longer addresses
himself to Ahaz singly, who
would not regard his words, but
to the whole royal family, all
of whom he reproves, as being
the king’s counsellors, and
promoting the design of sending
for the Assyrian succours. Is it
a small thing for you — Is it
not wickedness enough; to weary
men? — To vex God’s prophets and
people with your oppressions and
horrid impieties? But will ye
weary my God also? — By your
ingratitude, unbelief, and
disobedience to his commands?
Therefore — Because you despise
me, and the sign which I now
offer you, God, of his own free
grace, will send you a more
honourable messenger, and give
you a nobler sign. Or,
Nevertheless, (as the particle
לכןoften signifies,) the Lord
will give you a sign — Although
you deserve no sign nor favour,
yet for the comfort of those few
believers who are among you, and
to leave you without excuse, I
shall remind you of another and
greater sign, namely, of your
deliverance and preservation;
which God hath promised, and
will in his due time perform.
Behold, a virgin shall conceive,
&c. — One, in the strictest
sense, a virgin, as the Hebrew
word, עלמה, almah, here used,
properly signifies, and is
translated by all the ancient
interpreters, being never once
used in Scripture in any other
sense, as several learned men
have proved, against the
pretensions of the modern Jews.
See particularly Bishop Kidder’s
Demonstration of the Messias,
part 2. chap. 5., and Dr. Whitby
on Matthew 1:23. Indeed,
independent of the term rendered
virgin, the text implies it.
For, as the last-mentioned
writer observes, “this promise
is made as a sign, or miracle,
to confirm the house of David in
God’s promise made to him of the
perpetuity of his kingdom. Now
what sign or miracle could it
be, that a woman should be with
child, after the ordinary
manner? Where is the sign or
wonder in this? Had no more been
intended, what need was there of
these words, The Lord himself
shall give you a sign? What need
of that solemn notice, Behold!
there being nothing new or
strange in all this.” Add to
this, that the original
expressions are very emphatical,
and are literally rendered by
Bishop Lowth, Behold, the virgin
conceiveth, and beareth a son,
namely, that only woman, who
ever was, or should be a mother,
while she was still a virgin:
and whose offspring, being
conceived and born without the
concurrence of man, was,
therefore, with peculiar
propriety, denominated and
characterized, the seed of the
woman, being her seed
exclusively.
But it is inquired, how this
birth from a virgin, which was
not to happen till many ages
after, could be a sign to Ahaz
and the Jews, of their
deliverance from present danger;
and it is urged, that “this
promise, being made to Ahaz as a
sign, must have relation to a
child born in his time, and
therefore not to our Jesus, born
above seven hundred years after
his death.” To this, Dr. Whitby
answers, “This objection is
founded on a mistake: this
promise, or sign, being not
given to Ahaz, who, we have just
seen, refused to ask a sign; but
to the house of David, according
to Isaiah 7:13. Now the house of
David being then in great danger
of being cut off and
extinguished, by the kings of
Israel and Syria, the promise of
a Messiah, who was to be of the
seed of David, and to sit upon
his throne, was a great security
that that house should not be
extinguished, and so was a
proper remedy against those
fears.” To this may be added,
that this promised birth of the
Messiah supposed not only the
preservation of the house of
David, but also the preservation
of that city, and nation, and
tribe, in and of which he was to
be born: therefore there was no
cause to fear that ruin which
their enemies now threatened.
This argument is greatly
strengthened by the following
clause: And shall call — That
is, his virgin mother shall
call; his name Immanuel — The
mother usually giving the name
to the child, and this mother
having a peculiar right to do
it, the child having no human
father. To be called, in
Scripture language, is the same
thing as to be: the meaning is,
He shall be Immanuel, that is,
God with us; God dwelling among
us in our nature, the Word made
flesh, John 1:14. God and man
meeting in one person, and being
a mediator between God and men.
Now to whom but the Messiah was
this applicable? Or waiving the
import of the name; supposing
the being called by this name
did not imply that the child or
person should be what his name
signified, namely God with us,
what other person, save the
Messiah can be pointed out, that
was called by this name? To what
other event can this passage of
the prophecy be made to accord?
What woman, then a virgin, and
afterward marrying, and bearing
a son, called that son Immanuel?
Surely they who contend for this
sense of the prophet’s words,
should point out the person so
called. None have done this, and
none can do it. No such person
ever existed. As to what some
have suggested, that Hezekiah,
the son of Ahaz, might be meant,
and be said to be called by that
name, because he was the future
governor of the land, (see chap.
8:8,) and God was with him, it
must be observed, that he was
born at least nine years before
this prophecy was delivered,
even before Ahaz came to the
throne, and therefore his birth
could not be intended by the
prophet here. But not to pursue
the argument further, which
certainly is not necessary in so
clear a case; we will only add,
that even if it could be
supposed that the prophet did
first and immediately refer to
some child to be then born, yet,
as Bishop Lowth observes, (in
words hardly consistent with
what he had said, as quoted
above, of the primary sense of
the passage,) “The prophecy is
introduced in so solemn a
manner; the sign is so marked,
as a sign selected and given by
God himself, after Ahaz had
rejected the offer of any sign
of his own choosing, out of the
whole compass of nature; the
terms of the prophecy are so
peculiar, and the name of the
child so expressive, containing
in them much more than the
circumstances of the birth of a
common child required, or even
admitted; that we may easily
suppose, that, in minds prepared
by the general expectation of a
great deliverer, to spring from
the house of David, they raised
hopes far beyond what the
present occasion suggested;
especially when it was found
that in the subsequent prophecy,
delivered immediately afterward,
this child, called Immanuel, is
treated as the Lord and Prince
of the land of Judah. Who could
this be, other than the heir of
the throne of David? under which
character a great, and even a
divine person had been promised.
St. Matthew, therefore, in
applying this prophecy to the
birth of Christ, does it, not
merely in the way of
accommodating the words of the
prophet to a suitable case, not
in the prophet’s view; but takes
it in its strictest, clearest,
and most important sense, and
applies it according to the
original design, and principal
intention of the prophet.”
Verse 15
Isaiah 7:15. Butter and honey
shall he eat — The common food
of children in that country,
where these articles were in
great abundance, and of the best
sort. The principal meaning of
the verse seems to be, that this
child, called Immanuel, should
be brought up in the usual
manner, “the same republic still
continuing, and the cultivated
fields, unoccupied by the enemy,
abundantly supplying all
necessary food; and that thus he
should grow up to maturity.” The
words, however, also signify,
that though he should be
miraculously conceived, and
should be possessed of a nature
truly divine, yet he should be
also human, subject to all the
infirmities of our nature,
standing in need of food for his
support as other children do,
and by the help thereof growing
up from childhood to manhood.
That he may know — Or rather,
till he know, as לדעתוmay be
properly rendered; to refuse the
evil and choose the good — That
is, till his faculties be fully
unfolded, or, as Bishop Lowth
renders it, when he knows, &c.;
when they are unfolded, and he
is arrived at mature age. Both
in childhood and in manhood, he
shall be sustained by the usual
diet of the country, which,
being neither invaded nor
distressed by any foreign enemy,
shall yield food sufficient for
all its inhabitants.
Verse 16
Isaiah 7:16. For before the
child, &c. — “The learned
Vitringa,” says Dr. Dodd, “seems
to have proved beyond any doubt,
that the child spoken of in this
verse can be no other than he
who is spoken of in the
preceding verses. The connecting
particle for, and the repetition
of the words, refusing the evil
and choosing the good, evidently
demonstrate,” he thinks, “that
the IMMANUEL is here meant, and
that, in order to enter into the
immediate design of the prophet,
we are to consider that, rapt,
as it were, into future times,
he proposes the Immanuel, as a
sign of salvation to the people
of God, as if present, Behold a
virgin conceives; as if he
understood him to be at this
time conceived in the womb of
the virgin, and shortly to be
born: and he says, that more
time shall not elapse from his
birth to his capability of
discerning between good and
evil, than from hence to the
desertion of the land of the two
kings,” or the time specified,
Isaiah 8:4. Archbishop Usher,
however, Poole, Henry, Dr.
Kennicott, and some other
celebrated writers, conceive
that we have a two-fold prophecy
in this passage, the former
part, contained in Isaiah
7:14-15, referring to the
Messiah, and the latter,
contained in this verse, to
Shear-jashub, the son of Isaiah.
“That the 16th verse,” says Dr.
Kennicott, “contains a distinct
prophecy, appears from hence:
1st, The words preceding have
been proved to be confined to
the Messiah, whose birth was
then distant above seven hundred
years; whereas the words here
are confined to some child who
was not to arrive at years of
discretion before the kings,
then advancing against
Jerusalem, should be themselves
cut off. 2d, Some end was
undoubtedly to be answered by
the presence of Isaiah’s son,
whom God commanded him to take
with him when he went to visit
Ahaz; and yet no use at all
appears to have been made of
this son, unless he be referred
to in this sentence; and, 3d,
These prophecies are manifestly
distinguished by being addressed
to different persons. The first
was addressed to the house of
David, for the consolation of
the pious in general; as it
assured them, not only of the
preservation of that house, but
of God’s fidelity to his great
promise: whereas the second
promise is addressed to the king
in particular, as it foretold
the speedy destruction of the
two kings, his enemies.” Dr.
Doddridge, who also thinks that
this verse refers to
Shear-jashub, judging with Dr.
Kennicott, that Isaiah “was
ordered to take him in his hand
for no other imaginable reason,
but that something remarkable
was to be said of him,” defines
the general sense of these
verses from the 13th to be this:
“You have affronted God by
refusing a sign now; yet his
transcendent mercy will make
your present forfeited
deliverance, (by the death of
these confederate kings, which
shall happen before, הנער, this
child in my hand is grown up to
the exercise of reason,) a sign
of a much nobler deliverance by
the Messiah; who shall be born
of an immaculate virgin, and
shall condescend to pass through
the tender scenes of infancy, as
other children do.” In the
latter part of the verse, the
land that thou abhorrest, means
the countries of Syria and
Israel, which Ahaz abhorred for
their cruel designs and
practices against him. Shall be
forsaken of both her kings — So
far shall Rezin and Pekah be
from conquering thy land, that
they shall lose their own lands,
and their lives too: which they
did within two years after this
time, being both slain by the
king of Assyria, 2 Kings
15:29-30; and 2 Kings 16:9.
Verse 17
Isaiah 7:17. The Lord shall
bring upon thee — But although
God will deliver you at this
time, for his own name’s sake,
yet he will remember and requite
your wickedness, and hath a
dreadful judgment in store for
you. And upon thy people, and
thy father’s house — Upon thy
subjects, and upon thy sons and
successors, the kings of Judah:
the accomplishment of which
threatening is recorded in their
history. Part of the Assyrian
storm fell in Ahaz’s reign, 2
Chronicles 28:20; and he began
to reap the bitter fruit of his
confiding in the king of
Assyria, rather than in the Lord
of hosts. Days that have not
come — Namely, evil days, or
calamities; from the day that
Ephraim departed, &c. — When the
ten tribes revolted from thy
father’s house, and set up
another opposite kingdom. The
king of Assyria might well be
called their plague or calamity,
as he is called the rod of God’s
anger, Isaiah 10:5.
Verse 18-19
Isaiah 7:18-19. In that day —
Known to God, and appointed by
him for the execution of these
judgments; the Lord shall hiss
for the fly — The flies, rather.
Thus he calls these enemies, to
signify either their great
number, or their speedy march:
see on Isaiah 5:26. As the word
hiss carries with it a low idea,
and does not properly express
the meaning of the original word
שׁרק, sherek, which properly
signifies, sibilando advocare,
to call by whistling, it seems
desirable that it should not
have been used here and Isaiah
5:26. Bishop Lowth renders it,
Jehovah shall hist the fly,
shall call them softly, bring
them by a slight intimation of
his will. In the uttermost part
of the rivers, &c. — In their
extremity, where they go out
into the sea. The river Nile is
undoubtedly intended, which may
be called rivers, either for its
greatness, or because toward the
end of it it is divided into
seven streams. When the
Chaldeans had, in good measure,
subdued the Egyptians, it is
probable great numbers of the
Egyptian soldiers listed
themselves in the Chaldean army,
and with them invaded the land
of Judah. And for the bee, &c. —
The Assyrian army, compared to
bees, as for their numerous
forces and orderly march, so for
their fierce attempts and
mischievous effects. In the land
of Assyria — In the empire of
Assyria or Babylon; for these
two were united into one empire,
and therefore in Scripture are
promiscuously called sometimes
by one title, and sometimes by
the other. They shall come — The
flies, and especially the bees.
And shall rest all of them —
They shall have an easy victory;
few or none of them shall be
slain in the attempt. In the
desolate valleys — Such as they
found very fruitful, but made
desolate. And in the holes of
the rocks — To which possibly
the Israelites fled for refuge.
Upon all bushes — Which he
mentions, because flies and bees
use frequently to rest there;
and to intimate, that no place
should escape their fury.
Verse 20
Isaiah 7:20. The Lord shall
shave — Shall utterly spoil, as
shaving takes away the hair;
with a razor that is hired —
Hired by Ahaz; for he purchased
the aid of the Assyrians with
large sums of silver and gold, 2
Kings 16:7-8. And so the prophet
signifies the just judgment of
God, in scourging them with a
rod of their own making. By them
beyond the river — Euphrates,
called the river, by way of
eminence, beyond which Assyria
lay. By the king of Assyria — By
the successive kings of the
Assyrian empire, Sennacherib,
Esar-haddon, and especially by
Nebuchadnezzar, who, having
subdued the Assyrian monarchy,
from thenceforth was king of
Assyria as well as of Chaldea.
The head and the hair of the
feet, &c. — This highly
parabolical mode of expression
is used to denote “the utter
devastation of the country from
one end to the other, and the
plundering of the people from
the highest to the lowest. The
hairs of the head are those of
the highest order in the state;
those of the feet, or lower
parts, are the common people:
the beard is the king, the
high-priest, the very supreme in
dignity and majesty: for the
eastern people have always held
the beard in the highest
veneration, and have been
extremely jealous of its
honour.”
Verses 21-25
Isaiah 7:21-25. These verses
“contain an elegant and very
expressive description of a
country depopulated, and left to
run wild, from its adjuncts and
circumstances; the vineyards and
corn-fields, before well
cultivated, now overrun with
briers and thorns; much grass,
so that the few cattle that are
left, a young cow and two sheep,
have their full range, and
abundant pasture; so as to yield
milk in plenty to the scanty
family of the owner: the
thinly-scattered people living
not on corn, wine, and oil, the
produce of cultivation, but on
milk and honey, the gifts of
nature; and the whole land given
up to the wild beasts; so that
the miserable inhabitants are
forced to go out armed with bows
and arrows, either to defend
themselves against the wild
beasts, or to supply themselves
with necessary food by hunting.”
— Bishop Lowth. |