Verse 1
Isaiah 17:1. The burden of
Damascus — Both of that city and
kingdom. But though “this
prophecy, by its title, should
relate only to Damascus, is full
of much concerns, and more
largely treats of, the kingdom
of Samaria and the Israelites,
confederated with Damascus and
the Syrians against the kingdom
of Judah.” It is the fourth
discourse of the second book of
Isaiah’s prophecies, and “was
delivered probably soon after
the prophecies of the seventh
and eighth chapters, in the
beginning of the reign of Ahaz.
And it was fulfilled by
Tiglath-pileser’s taking
Damascus, and carrying the
people captives to Kir, (2 Kings
16:9,) and overrunning great
part of the kingdom of Israel,
and carrying a great number of
the Israelites also captives to
Assyria: and still more fully in
regard to Israel, by the
conquest of the kingdom, and the
captivity of the people,
effected a few years after by
Shalmaneser:” see 2 Kings 17:3,
and Bishop Lowth. Behold
Damascus is taken away from
being a city — It was, however,
afterward rebuilt, and
prophesied against by Jeremiah,
(Jeremiah 49:23,) and by
Zechariah 9:1.
Verse 2
Isaiah 17:2. The cities of Aroer
are forsaken — “What has Aroer,”
says Bishop Lowth, “on the river
Arnon, (see Deuteronomy 2:36,)
to do with Damascus?” He
therefore follows the LXX.,
(who, he supposes, for
ערער, Aroer, read עדי עד, εις
τον αιωνα,) and renders the
clause, The cities are deserted
for ever. Grotius, however,
thinks the present reading of
the Hebrew text is right, and
that this Aroer was a tract of
ground in Syria, (a valley, say
some, which lay between the
mountains of Libanus and Anti-Libanus,)
and not that Aroer which was on
the confines of Moab and Ammon,
and part of the possession of
the Reubenites and Gadites. But
as Tiglath-pileser carried the
Reubenites and Gadites into
captivity, (see 1 Chronicles
5:26,) and made the country,
which they had possessed,
desolate, why may not the very
Aroer, which was on the confines
of Moab, be meant, and mentioned
here, as Ephraim is in the next
verse, as being confederate with
Syria against Judah? And none
shall make them afraid — Because
the land shall be desolate, and
destitute of men who might
disturb them.
Verses 3-6
Isaiah 17:3-6. The fortress also
shall cease from Ephraim — The
meaning may be, that Damascus
being destroyed, that fortress
or protection, in which the
Ephraimites had placed their
confidence, should be taken; or,
that at what time Damascus
should be overthrown, and
deprived of all government and
power, the Ephraimites also
should be weakened, and deprived
of their chief fortresses by the
Assyrians; which latter seems to
be the true sense: see Hosea
10:14; Micah 1:6. The reader
will observe, the Syrians of
Damascus bordered upon the
Ephraimites; and though they had
long lived in a state of
hostility with them, yet their
King Rezin, on receiving some
injuries from Uzziah, king of
Judah, had found means to unite
them with him in an expedition
against Jerusalem. As the design
of that expedition was wholly
frustrated, (see Isaiah 7:3-9,)
so it hastened the destruction
of both those nations: for the
Assyrians, who were called in by
Ahaz to his help, and who had a
long time threatened Syria, took
this occasion to seize and
destroy Damascus, and transport
the Damascene Syrians to Assyria
and Media, which same fate,
partly at the same time, and
partly a little after, befell
the Ephraimites also; a common
cause involving these nations in
a common calamity. In that day,
the glory of Jacob shall be made
thin — Hebrew, ירל, attenuabitur,
shall be diminished, emptied, or
exhausted. And the fatness of
his flesh shall wax lean — Their
principal citizens shall be
spoiled of their dignity and
wealth, and carried, with their
property, into Assyria. And it
shall be as when a harvest-man
gathereth the corn — Taking
care, as far as may be, that all
be gathered in, and nothing
left. So shall the whole body of
the ten tribes be carried
captive, some few gleanings only
being left of them as it is in
harvest. As he that gathereth
ears in the valley of Rephaim —
A very fruitful place near
Jerusalem. Thus “the prophet
explains the judgment upon
Ephraim by two similes, and both
elegant; the first taken from a
beautiful body reduced by a
consumption, meaning that their
state should be deprived, not
only of its chief citizens, but
of all its power, wealth, and
honour; that whatever it
formerly possessed, which gave
excellence and beauty, should
entirely waste away and be
consumed. The second simile is
taken from the autumnal
gathering in of fruits, or from
that fertile harvest, whether of
corn, wine, or oil, which used
to be gathered in the valley of
Rephaim.” Yet gleaning grapes
shall be left in it, &c. —
“Whereas the reapers are wont to
leave a few ears of corn, and
those that gather grapes and
olives, a few of the worst
bunches of the grapes, and of
the worst berries of the olives,
so, from the harvest, which the
Assyrian should reap in Ephraim,
a few men, and those of the
least consequence, should be
left as a remnant in the land.”
This accordingly came to pass:
some few Israelites were left
after their captivity, who
joined themselves to Judah, and
were carried captive to Babylon
with them, from whence also they
returned with them.
Verse 7-8
Isaiah 17:7-8. At that day shall
a man — Those few men that are
left; look to his Maker — They
shall sincerely respect, trust
in, and worship God, and God
only. In other words, at that
time, when God shall execute
these severe judgments upon the
Ephraimites, some, being fully
convinced by experience that
they had been deceived by their
false prophets, and that their
worship of idols had turned out
as the true prophets foretold,
shall turn themselves, by
sincere repentance, to the God
of their fathers, and,
renouncing the errors of former
times, and all their sins, shall
worship and serve him in true
faith and obedience.
Verse 9
Isaiah 17:9. In that day — The
day of Jacob’s trouble, of which
he spake, Isaiah 17:4; shall his
strong cities be as a forsaken
bough — The cities belonging to
the ten tribes shall stand
solitary and destitute of
inhabitants, all the country
about them being destroyed; and
an uppermost branch, which they
left because of the children of
Israel — “The sense,” says
Lowth, “is here imperfect: most
expositors understand the words
of the Assyrians, that they left
some cities with a few
inhabitants in the kingdom of
Israel, that a remnant of that
people might be preserved: see
Isaiah 17:6. But the copy which
the LXX. followed, instead of
the Hebrew words, החרשׁ והאמיר,
hacho-resh vehaamir, that is,
bough and uppermost branch, must
have read החוי והאמרי, hachivi
vehaemori, the Hivites and
Amorites:
for they translate the verse
thus: Thy cities shall be
forsaken, as when the Hivites
and Amorites forsook them,
because of the children of
Israel. Which reading gives a
plain and full sense to the
text.” Thus also his son, Bishop
Lowth: “The translation of the
LXX has happily preserved what
seems to be the true reading of
the text, as it stood in the
copies of their time. And it is
remarkable, that many
commentators, who never thought
of admitting the reading of the
LXX., yet understand the passage
as referring to that very event,
which their version expresses:
so that, it is plain, nothing
can be more suitable to the
context.” Thus understood, the
prophet’s words were calculated
to awaken the Israelites to a
serious belief of this
threatening, as they reminded
them that God had inflicted the
same judgment upon the
Canaanites, and for the same
sins of which they were guilty:
and therefore gave them reason
to apprehend, according to the
prediction of Moses, that as
they committed the same
abominations, the land would
spew them out as it spewed out
the nations which were before
them.
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 17:10-11. Because thou, O
Israel, hast forgotten the God
of thy salvation — That God, who
was thy only sure defence;
therefore shalt thou plant
pleasant plants — Fetched from
far countries, and therefore
highly esteemed. The sense is,
Thou shalt use much industry and
cost, but to no purpose, as it
follows. In the day shalt thou
make thy plant to grow, &c. —
Beginning early in the morning,
thou shalt, from day to day, use
all care and diligence, that
what thou hast planted and sown
may thrive; but the harvest
shall be a heap, &c. — But in
the time of your grief, or when
this grievous calamity shall
come, all your harvest shall be
but one heap, very
inconsiderable in itself, and
easily carried away by your
enemies: in other words, “when
thou expectest to reap the fruit
of thy labours, thou shalt find
nothing but loss and
disappointment.” — Lowth. See
the margin, where the day of
inheritance means the time of
enjoying any thing which we have
taken pains for.
Verses 12-14
Isaiah 17:12-14. Wo, &c. — “We
have here the third member of
this prophetic discourse, and
the first part of the section
concerning the unexpected
overthrow of the Assyrians.
After the prophet had exhibited
the divine judgments upon the
Syrians, (Isaiah 17:1-3,) and
upon the Ephraimites, (Isaiah
17:4-11,) he immediately beholds
the Assyrians themselves, after
they had destroyed both those
states, (that is, eight years
after,) advancing against the
Jews, that they might oppress
and subject to them their state
also. But, at the same time, he
sees their grievous and sudden
fall, that is, the fall of
Sennacherib; for almost all
ancient and modern interpreters
are agreed that this prophecy
refers to him.” Wo to the
multitude of many people —
Combined against Judah, namely,
the Assyrians, whose army
consisted of vast numbers, and
of men of several nations. Which
make a noise like the noise of
the seas — Which invade my land
and people with great force and
fury, as the sea assaults the
shore, or pours itself upon the
land, when it has made a breach
in the banks which before
confined it. And to the rushing
of nations — Hebrew, לאמים
שׁאון, tumultuatio populorum,
the noise, rage, and impetuous
fury of the people of different
countries united in one mighty
overwhelming army. Bishop Lowth
translates the clause, And to
the roaring of the nations, who
make a roaring like the roaring
of mighty waters. Like the
roaring of mighty waters do the
nations roar. And he observes
that, “though this simile is
taken from a common appearance,
it is wrought up with such an
elegant boldness and
inexpressible propriety, that we
are at a loss whether we should
admire most the judgment or
sublimity of the sacred writer.”
But God shall rebuke them — Not
in words, but in deeds; shall
discomfit and overthrow them.
But the Hebrew, וגער בו ונס,
should rather be rendered, But
God rebukes him, and he flees
from far, namely, Sennacherib,
who is here immediately pointed
out, one hundred and eighty-
five thousand of his army being
smitten with instantaneous
death. The prophet’s idea seems
to have been taken from God’s
rebuke of the sea, when the
Israelites passed through out of
Egypt. And they shall be chased
as the chaff of the mountains —
The Jews used to thrash and
winnow their corn on hills and
places exposed to the wind,
which dispersed and blew away
the chaff; and like a rolling
thing — Which is moved by the
slightest touch, and much more
by a violent wind. The word,
which is גלגל, is rendered
thistle-down in the margin, and
gossamer, which is the down of
any plants, by Bishop Lowth. The
metaphor shows with what ease
God overcomes his enemies. And
behold at even-tide trouble —
Great terror and consternation
among God’s people for fear of
their enemies; and before the
morning he is not — Their
enemies are cut off by the hand
of God. The prophet here
evidently “alludes to the time
and circumstances of the
judgment which was inflicted on
the Assyrian by night, and
indeed in one night. At
even-tide the Jews were
certainly in great terror,
perplexity, and perturbation,
when besieged by the Assyrians:
in the morning, behold these
their enemies were all dead
corpses. Such is the sudden and
unexpected deliverance which God
sometimes grants to his people,
when their enemies are ready to
devour them: weeping may endure
for a night, but joy cometh in
the morning. This is the portion
of them that spoil us, &c. —
This is a triumphant conclusion,
uttered by the prophet in the
name of God’s people. “It holds
good in all ages of the church;
none can endeavour to remove
this stone from its place, but
they will find hurt to
themselves, Zechariah 12:3. In
this one example we see the fall
of all the great empires and
kingdoms of the world which
oppose the kingdom of Christ,
and the event of all the
attempts of Satan tending to its
destruction: in the evening,
confusion; in the morning,
serenity, arising by divine
grace on the church.” See
Vitringa. |