Verse 1
Isaiah 24:1. Behold, &c. —
According to Vitringa, the third
book of Isaiah’s prophecies
begins with this chapter, and
extends to the thirty-sixth,
being divided into three
discourses; the first
comprehending four chapters, the
second six, and the third two.
The general subject of the book
is the penal judgments denounced
by God upon the disobedient
Jews, and the enemies of the
church, with the most ample
promises to the true church.
This first discourse, contained
in this and the three following
chapters, Bishop Lowth thinks,
was delivered before the
destruction of Moab by
Shalmaneser, (see Isaiah 25:10,)
and consequently before the
destruction of Samaria, and
probably in the beginning of
Hezekiah’s reign. The Lord
maketh the earth empty — The
word הארצ, here translated the
earth, may, with equal
propriety, be rendered the land,
as indeed it is in Isaiah 24:3;
Isaiah 24:13 of this chapter,
and very frequently elsewhere.
The land of Canaan seems to be
here meant, including both
Israel and Judah, which was made
empty when the inhabitants of it
were carried into captivity,
which they were, first by the
Assyrians, and then by the
Chaldeans. And it was made still
more empty and desolate in the
last and great destruction of
its cities and people,
particularly of Jerusalem and
its inhabitants by the Romans;
of which see on Deuteronomy
28:62. To this destruction
especially the prophet is
thought to refer in many parts
of this chapter.
Verse 2-3
Isaiah 24:2-3. And it shall be,
as with the people, so with the
priest, &c. — The calamity shall
be universal, without any
respect or distinction of
persons or ranks of men; the
priests themselves, having been
partakers of the people’s sins,
shall also partake with them of
their plagues. As with the
buyer, so with the seller — The
purchaser of lands shall have no
more left than he that hath sold
his patrimony; but all persons
shall be made equal in beggary
and slavery. The land shall be
utterly emptied and utterly
spoiled — Shall be deprived both
of its riches and inhabitants.
“As the public calamities coming
upon the land were to be
repeated, at various times and
in various manners,” the sacred
writer is thought by some
interpreters to have
“accommodated his discourse to
these calamities, and divided it
into various articles and
gradations.” See Vitringa.
Verse 4
Isaiah 24:4. The earth, the
land, mourneth and fadeth away —
Hebrew, אבלה נבלה, abelah
nabelah, lamenteth, falleth. The
world languisheth, &c. — “The
world,” says Bishop Lowth, “is
the same with the land; that is,
the kingdoms of Israel and
Judah; orbis Iraeliticus,” the
Israelitish world. Heathen
authors frequently speak of
particular provinces and
countries under the name of
orbis, orbis habitabilis, and
orbis terrarum, the world, the
habitable world, the whole
world, &c. And the same mode of
speaking is often used in the
Scriptures, where we not only
find the Roman empire termed the
world, (even all the world,) as
Luke 2:1; Acts 11:28; but also
Babylon, (Isaiah 13:11,) and
this very land of Judea, John
12:19; and John 18:20. The
haughty people of the land —
Hebrew, מרום עם, the height of
the people, those of the highest
dignity in it; or the lofty
people, as Bishop Lowth renders
it. Not only common people are
depressed and stink in sorrow,
but the magistrates and rulers,
the rich and powerful, the
haughty and high-minded. Indeed,
these are wont to suffer most
under such calamities, either as
having most to lose, or as not
being used to hardships.
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 24:5-6. The earth also —
Rather, And the land is defiled
under the inhabitants thereof —
By the wickedness of its people.
Here we have the causes of the
divine judgment upon the land:
because they have transgressed
the laws — The laws of God
revealed to them, and pressed
upon them in a singular manner;
changed the ordinance — God’s
ordinances concerning his
worship and service; broken the
everlasting covenant — The
covenant made between God and
Abraham, and all his posterity,
which was everlasting, both on
God’s part, who, upon the
conditions therein expressed,
engaged himself to be a God to
them, and to their seed for
ever; and on Israel’s part, who
were obliged thereby to constant
and perpetual obedience through
all generations. Therefore hath
the curse — The curse of God
threatened to transgressors;
devoured the earth — See this
illustrated Zechariah 5:1. And
they that dwell therein are
desolate — Reduced to poverty,
by the spoiling of their goods.
The inhabitants are burned —
Destroyed by fire and sword, or
consumed by the wrath of God,
which is often compared to fire;
and few men left — The prophet’s
general meaning is, that the
inhabitants of the land should
waste away and be consumed,
being partly cut off by the
sword, partly dispersed by the
public calamities, partly
destroyed by famine, and partly
carried into captivity, so that
but few of them should remain,
and they only of the poorer
sort. And this was the face of
things in Judea at the time
referred to.
Verses 7-9
Isaiah 24:7-9. The new wine
mourneth, &c. — In these verses
we have a description, in
metaphorical language, of the
ruin and desolation brought on a
once flourishing land by a
destructive enemy. The wine,
figuratively speaking, mourns,
because there are none, or none
but enemies to God and Israel,
to drink it. The vine
languisheth — Because there are
no people left to dress it, or
gather its grapes; or because it
is broken down and spoiled by
the enemy. In other words, the
vineyards are destroyed, and the
fruits of the earth consumed by
hostile invasions. The mirth of
tabrets ceaseth — There is no
place for mirth or rejoicing,
much less for the usual
expressions of it, when men are
under such great calamities.
They shall not drink wine with a
song — Those that can command
wine under this scarcity will
have no heart to drink it: nor
would it, if drunk, be able to
cheer their spirits amidst such
great troubles.
Verses 10-12
Isaiah 24:10-12. The city —
Jerusalem, and other cities, for
the word may be here taken
collectively; of confusion —
Hebrew, תהו, which signifies
vanity, emptiness, desolation,
or confusion. And the city may
be thus called, either, 1st, In
regard of the judgments of God
coming upon it, as if he had
termed it a city devoted to
desolation and destruction: or,
2d, For its sin, a city of
confusion and disorder; breaking
all the laws and orders which
God had established among them;
or a city walking in and after
vanity, worshipping vain idols,
and pursuing vain things. And
this may seem the most proper
and suitable, that the sin of
the city should be pointed out
in this word, as the punishment
is expressed in the next; is
broken down — Its walls,
palaces, and temple battered
down and demolished; every house
is shut up — Either for fear of
the enemy, who have entered the
city, or because the inhabitants
are either fled or dead, or gone
into captivity. This seems to be
only applicable to the
destruction of the city by the
Chaldeans, or by the Romans.
There is a crying for wine — For
the want or loss of their wine;
or for the spoiling of the
vintage, whereby they were
deprived of the means both of
their profit and pleasure. In
the city is desolation — In
Jerusalem itself, that had been
so much frequented, there shall
be left nothing but desolation;
grass shall grow in the streets.
The gate is smitten with
destruction — The gates of the
city are totally ruined, so that
the enemy may enter when and
where they please. Or, all that
used to pass and repass through
the gates are smitten, and all
the strength of the city is
destroyed. How soon can God make
a city of order, a city of
confusion; and then it will soon
be a city of desolation!
Verse 13-14
Isaiah 24:13-14. When thus it
shall be in the midst of the
land, &c. — When this judgment
shall be executed, there shall
he left a remnant; as there are
some few olives or grapes left
after the vintage is over. They
shall lift up their voice, &c. —
The remnant shall sing for the
glorious power and goodness of
God manifested in their
deliverance. They shall cry
aloud —
In a way of exultation and
thanksgiving to God; from the
sea — From the isles of the sea,
as it is expressed in Isaiah
24:15, that is, from the isles
of the Western or Mediterranean
sea, whither many of the Jews
were scattered, and where they
sojourned. “The great distresses
brought upon Israel and Judah
drove the people away, and
dispersed them all over the
neighbouring countries; they
fled to Egypt, to Asia Minor, to
the islands and coasts of
Greece. They were to be found in
great numbers in most of the
principal cities of these
countries. Alexandria was, in a
great measure, peopled by them.
They had synagogues for their
worship in many places; and were
greatly instrumental in
propagating the knowledge of the
true God among these heathen
nations, and preparing them for
the reception of Christianity.
This is what the prophet seems
to mean by the celebration of
the name of JEHOVAH in the
distant coasts, and in the
uttermost parts of the land.” —
Bishop Lowth.
Verse 15
Isaiah 24:15. Wherefore glorify
ye the Lord — These seem to be
the words of the prophet
directing and exciting God’s
people to glorify him in their
afflictions, because of that
deliverance which he had
promised, and would assuredly
grant them; in the fires — When
you are in the furnace of
affliction. But, as the word
בארים, here translated, in the
fires, is not used elsewhere in
Scripture, in this sense, others
render it, in the valleys; and
others again, in the holes, or
caves: as if he had said,
Glorify ye the Lord, who are
forced to hide yourselves in
secret places. Possibly,
however, the word may be better
rendered, for lights, or
illuminations, which may be
understood, either of the light
of the truth which God would
reveal to them, or of the
comfort which God would confer
upon them, light being
frequently taken in both senses
in Scripture. For this Hebrew
word, in all other places of
Scripture where it is found,
signifies the Urim, which was in
the high-priest’s breast-plate,
and which properly signifies
lights or illuminations, as both
Jews and Christians understand
it: see note on Exodus 28:30.
Add to this, that this part of
the prophecy seems to concern
the days of the gospel, and that
light which the Jews should then
receive by the Messiah, of whom
the high-priest, with his ephod
and urim, was a type. Thus
understood, this is an
exhortation to the converted
Jews to bless God for the true
Urim, even for Christ and the
gospel. The name of the Lord in
the isles of the sea — In remote
countries beyond the sea, which
in Scripture are commonly called
isles. It is a just observation
of Mr. Scott, that “the chief
accomplishment of this prophecy
seems to have been after the
destruction of Jerusalem by the
Romans. At that season there was
a small company like the
gleanings of the vine, or of the
olive, which had embraced
Christianity; and wherever they
were dispersed among the
nations, and in the isles of the
sea, they lifted up their voice
in songs of praise, while they
beheld the majesty of God
displayed in accomplishing these
predictions; and mingled
thanksgivings with their fervent
prayers; nay, they excited one
another to glorify God in the
fiery trial of persecution, and
though banished to the remotest
regions. The destruction of
Jerusalem was exceedingly
conducive to the establishment
of the Christian Church; and, in
this respect, was the subject of
joy and praise to the primitive
Christians.”
Verse 16
Isaiah 24:16. From the uttermost
part, &c. — From all parts of
the earth, or land, where the
Jews are, or shall be, have we
heard songs — Songs of joy and
praise; even glory to the
righteous — By the righteous,
may be here understood, either,
1st, righteous and holy men, who
formerly were despised, but now
shall be honoured; or, 2d, the
Lord, the righteous one, as the
Hebrew לצדיק, being singular,
properly means; or, 3d, the
Messiah, to whom this title of
the just, or righteous one, is
frequently given. But I said —
But in the midst of these joyous
tidings, I discern something
which interrupts my joys, and
gives me cause of bitter
complaint and lamentation; My
leanness! my leanness! — I faint
and pine away for grief; for the
following reason: The
treacherous dealers have dealt
treacherously — The Jews, who
have been frequently guilty of
great perfidiousness toward God,
are now acting the same part.
This he speaks of those who
should live when the Messiah
should be upon earth, fore-
seeing, by the Holy Spirit, that
they would forsake God and
reject their Messiah, and
thereby bring utter destruction
upon themselves. For even the
Hebrew doctors expound this
place of the perfidiousness of
some Jews in the times of the
Messiah. And it is not strange
that so sad a sight made the
prophet cry out, My leanness,
&c., the treacherous dealers,
&c. This he repeats, to show the
horridness of the crime, and how
deeply he was affected with it.
Verse 17-18
Isaiah 24:17-18. Fear, and the
pit, and the snare, &c. — Great
and various judgments, some
actually inflicted, and others
justly feared, as the punishment
of the last-mentioned
perfidiousness of the Jews
toward God and their own
Messiah. He that fleeth from the
fear, &c. — Upon the report of
some terrible evil coming toward
him; shall fall into the pit —
When he designs to avoid one
danger, by so doing he shall
plunge himself into another and
greater mischief. For the
windows from on high are opened,
&c. — Both heaven and earth
conspire against him. He alludes
to the deluge of waters which
God poured down from heaven, and
to the earthquake which he often
causes below. There is a
remarkable elegance in the
original of the 17th verse. The
three Hebrew words, פחד, pachad,
פחת, pachath, and פח, pach,
being a paronomasia, or having
an affinity in sound with each
other, which cannot be
translated into another
language. And there is also
great sublimity in the latter
clause of the 18th verse, in
which the ideas and expressions,
taken from the deluge, are
strongly expressive of that
deluge of divine wrath which
should fall upon, and totally
overwhelm, the apostate Jews for
rejecting and crucifying their
own Messiah.
Verse 19-20
Isaiah 24:19-20. The earth is
utterly broken down — This is
repeated again, to show the
dreadfulness and certainty of
these judgments, and to awaken
the stupid Israelites. The earth
shall reel to and fro — The
people of the earth, the
inhabitants of the land, shall
be sorely perplexed and
distressed, not knowing what to
do, or whither to go. Or rather,
the prophet here, in
metaphorical expressions,
borrowed from an earthquake,
signifies how terribly Judea
should be shaken by wars,
desolations, and other divine
judgments, to the entire
overthrow of their church and
commonwealth; and shall be
removed — The people shall be
removed, or their constitution,
civil and religious, like a
cottage — Or, like a lodge in a
garden, of which this word is
used, Isaiah 1:8, which is soon
taken down and set up in another
place: or, like a tent, which is
easily and commonly carried from
place to place. And the
transgression thereof shall be
heavy upon it — Upon their state
and nation, especially the sin
of crucifying the Lord of glory.
And it shall fall — Their
government shall be overturned,
their state dissolved, and their
nation ruined; and not rise
again — Not till the latter
days, when they shall believe in
and receive Him whom they
rejected and crucified.
Verse 21-22
Isaiah 24:21-22. It shall come
to pass in that day — At or soon
after the time when God shall
execute the above-mentioned
judgment on the apostate Jews;
that the Lord shall punish the
host of the high ones — The
proud and potent enemies of his
people, who possess the high
places of the earth; and the
kings of the earth — The great
monarchs of the world, who now
scorn and trample on his people.
Some think the idolatrous
persecuting Roman empire is here
intended, but what follows seems
to require that we should
understand these verses as a
further prediction of the ruin
of the Jewish constitution in
church and state. Bishop Lowth
translates them, Jehovah shall
summon on high the host that is
on high; and on earth the kings
of the earth; which he
interprets of “the
ecclesiastical and civil polity
of the Jews, which were to be
destroyed;” the host of the high
ones meaning the chief priests,
with the high-priest at their
head, or their ecclesiastical
government, and the kings of the
earth their civil power; the
name of king being frequently
given in Scripture unto inferior
rulers. And they shall be
gathered together — By God’s
special providence, in order to
their punishment. And thus the
unbelieving Jews were generally
gathered together at Jerusalem,
to their solemn feasts, when
Titus came and besieged and
destroyed them; and shall be
shut up in prison — As
malefactors, which are taken in
several places, are usually
brought to one common prison.
After many days they shall be
visited — After the apostate
Jews shall have been shut up in
unbelief, and in great
tribulations for many ages
together, they shall be
convinced of their sin in
crucifying the Messiah, and
brought home to God and Christ
by true repentance. “The
nation,” says Bishop Lowth,
“shall continue in a state of
depression and dereliction for a
long time. The image seems to be
taken from the practice of the
great monarchs of that time,
who, when they had thrown their
wretched captives into a
dungeon, never gave themselves
the trouble of inquiring about
them, but let them lie a long
time in that miserable
condition, wholly destitute of
relief, and disregarded. God
shall at length revisit and
restore his people in the last
age: and then the kingdom of God
shall be established in such
perfection, as wholly to obscure
and eclipse the glory of the
temporary, typical, preparative
kingdom now subsisting,” as is
signified in the next verse.
Verse 23
Isaiah 24:23. Then the moon
shall be confounded — The
shadowy, typical, temporary, and
imperfect dispensation of Moses,
which afforded only a dim and
uncertain light, like that of
the moon, shall be eclipsed and
vanish; and the sun ashamed —
The glory of the civil
government, also even of the
kingdom of David itself, shall
be obscured by the far greater
splendour of the kingdom of
Christ, the King of kings, at
whose feet the kings of the
earth shall fall down and
worship. When the Lord of hosts
— The Messiah, who, though man,
is yet also God, and the Lord of
hosts; shall reign in mount
Zion, &c. — Shall come in the
flesh, and set up his kingdom,
first in Jerusalem, and
afterward in all other nations;
before his ancients — His
ministers, who are, in some
sort, the courtiers of this King
of glory, as being continually
attendant upon him, enjoying his
presence, and executing the
offices intrusted to them; and
especially before his apostles,
who were the witnesses of his
divine words and works, and
particularly of his resurrection
and ascension, by which he
entered upon his kingdom; and of
the exercise of his royal power
in subduing both Jews and
Gentiles to himself. The word
ancient, or elder, is not a name
of age, but of office. And the
ancients here represent, and are
put for, the whole church, in
whose name, and for whose
service, they act.
Some think that, at the
twenty-first verse, a transition
is made from the ruin of the
Jewish nation for opposing the
gospel, to the destruction of
the anti- christian powers,
which is to introduce the
general prevalence of true
religion, and the glory of
Christ’s millennial reign; and
that the twenty-first and
twenty-second verses are
intended of that destruction.
There is, however, this
objection to that
interpretation: it is not
reconcileable with the last
clause of Isaiah 24:22, namely,
after many days they shall be
visited. For surely these
antichristian powers are not to
be visited and restored. This
clause indeed, considering the
connection in which it stands,
does not seem to be applicable
to any event predicted in
Scripture, but the conversion
and restoration of the Jewish
nation after the many ages of
their dereliction and
depression. Then, however, when
the fulness of the Gentiles
shall be brought in, and all
Israel shall be saved, the
twenty-third verse shall receive
a far more complete
accomplishment. The Messiah’s
kingdom shall then appear in its
greatest glory on earth; and the
moon shall be confounded, and
the sun ashamed. Not only the
borrowed light of inferior and
subordinate states, but the
splendour of the mightiest
empires shall be eclipsed and
put to shame by it. |