Verse 1
Isaiah 20:1. In the year that
Tartan came to Ashdod — Namely,
to besiege it. Tartan is
mentioned (2 Kings 18:17) as one
of the generals of Sennacherib,
who is generally supposed to be
here meant by Sargon, which was
probably one of the seven names
by which Jerome, on this place,
says he was called. Ashdod, or
Azotus, was an eminent and
strong city, formerly belonging
to the Philistines, in the
utmost part of the land of
Canaan toward Egypt. Afterward,
according to Herodotus, it held
out twenty-nine years against
Psammitichus, king of Egypt. It
is likely that at this time it
belonged to Hezekiah’s
dominions, and that its
inhabitants expected to be
relieved during the siege by the
Egyptians and Cushites, or
Ethiopians. The taking of it,
Bishop Lowth thinks, must have
happened before Sennacherib’s
attempt on Jerusalem; when he
boasted of his late conquests,
Isaiah 37:25 : and the warning
of the prophet had a principal
respect to the Jews also, who
were too much inclined to depend
on the assistance of Egypt.
Verse 2
Isaiah 20:2. Go loose the
sackcloth from off thy loins —
By the sackcloth is meant either
the hairy garment usually worn
by the prophets, or a mournful
habit, such as was commonly made
of sackcloth which he wore in
token of his grief for the great
calamities that were already
come upon Israel, and were
coming on Judah. And he did so,
walking naked and barefoot — Not
wholly naked, but without his
upper garment; as slaves and
prisoners used to do, whose
condition he was to represent.
This action was both agreeable
to the mode of instruction made
use of in those times, and, as
it was intended to excite the
attention of the Israelites, was
likewise very well adapted to
promote that intention. —
Vitringa.
Verses 3-6
Isaiah 20:3-6. And the Lord —
Who here explains and applies
the sign, said, Like as my
servant hath walked naked, &c.,
three years — Not constantly,
but when he went abroad among
the people, to whom this was
appointed to be a sign. Bishop
Lowth says, probably three days,
to show, that within three years
the Egyptians and Ethiopians
should be conquered and made
captives by the king of Assyria,
and be in the same condition,
and that the town should be
taken. But it is objected, that
although a day is usually put
for a year in the prophetic
scriptures, a year is never put
for a day. The former
interpretation, therefore, is
more probable. For a sign and
wonder, &c. — Either when this
judgment should come, namely,
three years after this prophecy
was thus uttered, or how long it
should continue, namely, for
three years: for some have
observed, that the Assyrians
spent so much time in conquering
Egypt and Ethiopia. So shall the
king of Assyria lead away the
Egyptians — Like beasts, as
ינהגis commonly used. And they
shall be afraid and ashamed —
Namely, all they that shall
trust to them, and glory in
them. In which words, “we have
the consequence of the divine
judgment upon the Egyptians and
Ethiopians, and the scope of the
prophecy, namely, to convince
the inhabitants of Palestine,
and among these some factious
persons in Jerusalem, of the
vanity of the confidence they
placed in them; for when they
should see the completion of
this prophecy, they should then
condemn their own folly for
placing their expectations on so
feeble a defence.” The
inhabitant of this isle — Of
this land, in which the prophet
was, and to whose inhabitants
these words were uttered. For
the name of isles, or islands,
is frequently given in
Scripture, not only to lands
encompassed with the sea, but
also to such countries as were
on the sea- coast, as Palestine
or Canaan was. Shall say,
Behold, such is our expectation
— So vain is our hope, placed
upon such a people as are unable
to deliver themselves, and much
more to deliver us: whither we
flee for help — To whom we now
and usually trust: and how shall
we escape — Either by their
help, who cannot defend
themselves, or by our own
strength, seeing they, who were
much more potent than we are,
could not escape? |