Verse 1-2
Isaiah 16:1-2. Send ye the lamb,
&c. — The prophet continues his
prophecy against Moab, and gives
them counsel what to do to
prevent, if possible, or at
least to mitigate, the
threatened judgment. First he
advises them to be just to the
house of David, and to pay the
tribute they had formerly
covenanted to pay to the kings
of his line. David, it must be
recollected, had subdued the
Moabites, and made them
tributaries to him, 2 Samuel
8:2. Afterward they paid their
tribute to the kings of Israel,
2 Kings 3:4; which, it appears,
was not less than 100,000 lambs
annually. This it is likely had
been discontinued, and neither
paid to the kings of Israel nor
those of Judah. Now it is
thought the prophet here
requires them to pay this
tribute, or, at least, what they
had covenanted with David to
pay, to the king of Judah, who
was now Hezekiah, that thereby
they might at once do an act of
neglected justice, and make him
and the Jews their friends,
which would be of great use to
them in their calamity. These
verses therefore are thus
paraphrased by Vitringa: “Ye
Moabites, who, subdued by David,
and made tributary to his house
and kingdom, have, with pride
and arrogance, shaken off his
yoke: placate in time, and
render propitious to you, the
Jews, and their king, by sending
those lambs, which you owe to
them as a tribute. Send them
from Sela, or Petra, (which was
most celebrated for its flocks,
2 Kings 14:7,) toward the
desert, the desert near Jericho,
a medium place between Sela and
mount Zion, Joshua 5:10.” Or, as
the words may be rendered, from
Sela, of, or, in the wilderness.
“Pay this tribute, for it shall
most certainly come to pass,
that the daughters of the
Moabites, like a wandering bird
from a deserted nest, driven
from their seats, must somewhere
seek a place of safety in the
great calamity which shall
befall their nation. It is
therefore now time to solicit
the friendship of the Jews, and
to remember the duty owing to
them, but so long omitted; that
when expelled from your own
habitations, you may be received
kindly by them, and dwell
hospitably in their land, and
under the shadow of their
kings.” Some, however,
understand the prophet as
advising them to send a lamb for
a sacrifice unto God, the ruler
of the land of the Moabites, as
well as of that of the Jews; or
the ruler of the earth, as ארצ
is commonly rendered: to him who
is the God of the whole earth,
as he is called, Isaiah 54:5. Of
all the kingdoms of the earth,
Isaiah 37:16. As if he had said,
Make your peace with God, by
sacrifice, for all your injuries
done to him and to his people.
The fords of Arnon was the
border of the land of Moab,
where their daughters are
supposed to be with a design to
flee out of their own land,
though they knew not whither.
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 16:3-4. Take counsel, &c.
— We have here the second
counsel given to the Moabites,
which “contains a complex of
various offices, equity,
justice, humanity, to be
exercised toward those of the
Israelites whom the Assyrian
affliction had driven, or should
drive, to their borders and
cities, and who should seek
refuge among them: which counsel
is so given to the Moabites, by
the prophet, as evidently to
upbraid them for the fault of
having neglected these offices;
the pernicious consequences of
which they were sure to feel in
the ensuing calamities, if they
altered not so bad a practice.”
— Dodd, Execute judgment —
Hebrew, עשׂי פלילה, make a
distinction. The expression
denotes that act of the mind
whereby it “discriminates truth
from falsehood, right from
wrong;” as if he had said,
“Consider what becomes you, what
is your duty in this case; what
you owe to exiles and outcasts,
both by the laws of equity and
reason, of humanity and
brotherly love.” Make thy shadow
as the night — Or, as the shadow
of the night, large and dark, as
the shadow of the earth is in
the night-season. “Afford my
exiled and afflicted people, who
shall flee to you for safety, a
safe retreat, defence, and
succour against the extreme, the
noon-day heat of the sharp
persecution which so heavily
oppresses them.” The idea is
taken from the comfort of a
shady situation in those hot
countries; and the metaphor is
fully explained in what follows.
Vitringa is of opinion that the
prophet here refers to the
distress of the Reubenites,
Gadites, and Manassites under
Tiglath-pileser. But it is more
probable that he refers to the
distress which should be caused
in Judah by Pekah and Rezin, in
the days of Ahaz, (Isaiah 9:1,)
or that by the Assyrians? when
Sennacherib came up against the
defenced cities of Judah, and
took them, Isaiah 36:1; during
which distresses, undoubtedly,
many of the Jews sought shelter
among the Moabites and other
neighbouring nations. For the
extortioner is at an end —
Hebrew, אפס המצ, the presser,
wringer, or oppressor hath left
off, or, as Bishop Lowth
translates it, is no more; that
is, shall shortly be destroyed,
and my people shall ere long be
restored, and then thou wilt not
lose the fruit of thy kindness.
The bishop renders the next two
clauses, “The destroyer ceaseth,
he that trampled under foot is
perished from the land.” The
present tense is put for the
future, as it often is in
prophecies. Thus “the prophet
supports his counsel by a
reason, the sum of which is,
that oppression should cease,
the spoilers of the earth be cut
off, and the throne of clemency
and grace established, on which
a king of righteousness and
equity should sit.”
Verse 5
Isaiah 16:5. And in mercy — By
my mercy. I am now punishing
their sins, yet I will deliver
them for my own mercy’s sake.
The throne shall be established
— The kingdom of Judah. He —
Their king; shall sit upon it in
truth — That is, firmly and
constantly; for truth is often
put for the stability and
certainty of a thing, as 2
Chronicles 32:1; Proverbs 11:18.
In the tabernacle of David — In
the house, or palace, which is
called a tent, or tabernacle,
with respect to the
unsettledness of David’s house,
which now indeed was more like a
tabernacle than a strong palace.
Seeking judgment — Searching out
the truth of things with care
and diligence; and hasting
righteousness — Neither denying
nor yet delaying justice.
Interpreters vary greatly
concerning the application of
this passage. Some refer it
entirely to Hezekiah, a pious
and just king, whose throne,
after the chastisement of
Sennacherib in Judea, was
established in glory; others
refer it immediately to the
Messiah; and others again to
both: to Hezekiah as the type,
and to the Messiah, in a more
sublime sense, as the antitype;
and this seems to be nearly the
opinion of Vitringa, who thinks
that while the prophet was
speaking of the advantages of
the kingdom of Hezekiah, he was
carried forward to a
contemplation of the kingdom of
Christ, and made use of such
phrases as, in their full
extent, can only be applied to
that kingdom.
Verse 6-7
Isaiah 16:6-7. We have heard of
the pride of Moab, &c. — The
prophet, having spoken to the
Moabites, now turns his speech
to God’s people. The sense is, I
do not expect that my counsels
will have any good effect upon
Moab; they will still carry
themselves insolently and
outrageously. His lies shall not
be so — His vain imaginations,
and false and crafty counsels,
shall not take effect. Therefore
shall Moab howl for Moab — One
Moabite shall howl or lament to
or for another; for the
foundations of Kir-hareseth — An
ancient and eminent city of
Moab, called Kir, Isaiah 15:1,
and Kir-haresh, Isaiah 16:11,
which was preserved when their
other cities were ruined, and
therefore the destruction of it
was more lamented. Surely they
are stricken — Or broken,
overthrown or destroyed.
Verses 8-10
Isaiah 16:8-10. The fields of
Heshbon languish — Either for
want of rain, or, rather,
because no men should be left to
till and manure them. And the
vine of Sibmah — These vines and
those of Heshbon were greatly
celebrated, and held in high
repute with all the great men
and princes of that and the
neighbouring countries, and were
propagated from thence, not only
over all the country of Moab,
but to the sea of Sodom; yea,
scions of them, as is signified
in the last clause of this
verse, were sent even beyond the
sea into foreign countries: but
the prophet here foretels, that
the lords of the heathen — That
is, the Assyrians or Chaldeans,
the great rulers of the eastern
nations, would soon destroy
them, and all other productions
of the land; and then their
shouting and singing for the
vintage or harvest would utterly
cease, as is expressed Isaiah
16:9-10.
Verse 11-12
Isaiah 16:11-12. Wherefore my
bowels shall sound as a harp —
Through compassion. In excessive
grief, the bowels are sometimes
rolled together, so as to make
an audible noise. Hereby he
signifies the greatness of their
approaching calamity, which,
being so grievous to him, must
needs be intolerable to them.
And when it is seen that Moab is
weary, &c. — When it shall
appear to them and others, that
all their other devotions are
vain and ineffectual; he shall
come to his sanctuary to pray —
To the temple of his great god
Chemosh; but he shall not
prevail — His god can neither
hear nor help him. In other
words, the Moabites, “as their
last efforts, shall go to their
altars, there to perform their
sacred rites to appease the
anger of their deity: but,
wearied herewith, they shall
enter into some more sacred and
celebrated sanctuary of their
god, to pour forth their earnest
supplications and prayers, but
shall obtain nothing; thus
proving the vanity of their
superstition, and the imbecility
of those false deities on whom
they trusted.”
Verse 13-14
Isaiah 16:13-14. This is the
word that the Lord hath spoken —
This prophecy, hitherto related;
since that time — Since the
beginning of God’s revelation to
me concerning Moab hitherto; or,
rather, a good while ago, for so
the Hebrew, מאז, meaz,
signifies, Isaiah 44:8, and
elsewhere. This judgment, says
the prophet, was denounced
against Moab in former times,
particularly by Amos, (Amos
2:1,) and is now confirmed, and
the particular time specified
when it shall be accomplished.
For now the Lord hath spoken —
Hath made this further discovery
of his mind to me; saying,
Within three years — To be
computed, it seems, from the
time of the delivery of this
prophecy; as the years of a
hireling — That is, within three
years precisely counted; for
hirelings are very punctual in
observing the time for which
they are hired; and the glory of
Moab shall be contemned — Their
strength, and wealth, and other
things in which they glory,
shall be made contemptible to
those who formerly admired them;
with all that great multitude —
With the great numbers of their
people, of which they boasted.
And the remnant shall be very
small and feeble — Comparatively
to what they were before.
Vitringa is of opinion, that
this prophecy was delivered at
the same time with that
preceding, that is, in the year
when Ahaz died, at which time
the Israelites, as well as the
Jews, stood much in need of the
kindness of the Moabites; so
that it had its completion in
the third year of King Hezekiah,
namely, from the death of his
father, which was really the
fourth year of his reign, when
Shalmaneser, coming against the
Ephraimites, on a sudden
attacked the Moabites, and
plundered and destroyed their
cities: see 2 Kings 18:9. This
is also Bishop Lowth’s opinion,
as has been stated in the note
on Isaiah 15:1. It may, however,
be understood of some other
great blow given to the
Moabites; perhaps by
Sennacherib, or by his son
Esar-haddon; (in which case
Isaiah must have delivered this
prophecy some years later;) from
which blow, notwithstanding,
they in a little time recovered
themselves, and flourished
again, and continued so to do,
till Nebuchadnezzar completed
their destruction according to
the prophecy of Jeremiah 48:1,
&c. |