Verse 1-2
Isaiah 26:1-2. In that day —
When God shall do such glorious
works for the comfort of his
people, as are described in the
foregoing chapter; shall this
song be sung in the land of
Judah — In the church of God,
often signified by the titles of
Judah, Jerusalem, Zion, and the
like. We have a strong city —
Jerusalem, or the church, which
is often compared to a city.
Salvation will God appoint, &c.
— God’s immediate and saving
protection shall be to his
church instead of walls. Open ye
the gates — Of the city,
mentioned Isaiah 26:1. An
expression which implies the
increase of the number of
believers, and the enlargement
of the church. That the
righteous nation —
The whole body of righteous men,
whether Jews or Gentiles; (for
he seems to speak here, as he
apparently did in the foregoing
chapter, of the times of the
gospel;) which keepeth the truth
— Which is sincere and steadfast
in the profession and practice
of the true religion; may enter
in — May be received and
acknowledged as true members of
the church, which all such
persons undoubtedly are.
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 26:3-4. Thou wilt keep
him in perfect peace — Hebrew,
in peace, peace; peace with God,
and peace of conscience; peace
at all times, and under all
events; whose mind is stayed on
thee — Hebrew, יצר סמוךְ, the
thought, or, mind fixed, or, the
stayed mind, as Bishop Lowth
renders it; that is, the man
whose thoughts and mind are
fixed and settled on thee by
faith, as the next clause
explains it. In the foregoing
verse, the righteous are
represented as being admitted
into the city, and here as being
preserved and defended in it by
God’s almighty power. Trust ye
in the Lord — Ye, who truly turn
to and obey him; for ever — In
all times and conditions, and as
long as you live; for in the
Lord Jehovah —
In him who was, and is, and is
to come; is everlasting strength
— Hebrew, צור עולמים, the rock
of ages; which will assuredly
support those who build their
confidence thereon. That is, he
is a sure refuge to all those
that trust in him through all
generations.
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 26:5-6. For he bringeth
down — Hebrew, he hath brought
down, or, as it may be rendered,
he will bring down, them that
dwell on high — He speaks not so
much of height of place, as of
dignity and power, in which
sense also he mentions the lofty
city in the next clause; which
may be understood, either of
proud Babylon, or of all the
strong and stately cities of
God’s enemies. The foot shall
tread it down — God will bring
it under the feet of his poor,
weak, and despised people. The
meaning is, you have good reason
for trusting in God, for he can
and does raise up some and throw
down others, according to his
own good pleasure.
Verse 7
Isaiah 26:7. The way of the just
is uprightness — Hebrew,
מישׁרים, righteousness. The just
proceed steadily on in the
practice of the various duties
of righteousness, which they owe
to God and man; or, their way is
evenness, or plainness, as the
word may be rendered. It is
their constant care and
endeavour to walk with God in an
even, steady course of obedience
and holy conversation. Bishop
Lowth translates the clause, the
way of the righteous is
perfectly straight, not crooked,
involved, and intricate, like
that of the wicked. Thou, most
upright, dost weigh the path of
the just — Dost mark and
consider it, and observe the
various difficulties and dangers
that will occur in it, and wilt
give them grace sufficient for
them; or, thou dost examine it.
Thou, who art most upright in
all thy ways, and therefore a
lover of uprightness, and of all
upright men, dost weigh, dost
narrowly observe and ponder, the
path of the just; the whole
course of their actions, and,
which is implied, dost approve
of them, and direct them to a
happy issue. This seems to be
the most common meaning of the
word פלס, here rendered to
weigh: see Proverbs 4:26;
Proverbs 5:21. It bears,
however, another sense, Psalms
78:50, namely, to make the way
plain, or, to remove
obstructions out of it. In this
sense Bishop Lowth understands
it here, and therefore
translates the clause, thou most
exactly levellest the path of
the righteous. While the way of
the wicked is perplexed, and
rugged, and full of
obstructions, God makes the way
of the righteous plain and easy
before them, by preventing or
removing those things that would
be stumbling-blocks to them, so
that they walk safely and
comfortably forward in the path
of duty.
Verse 8-9
Isaiah 26:8-9. Yea, in the way
of thy judgments, O Lord — That
is, as some understand it, of
thine ordinances and
commandments, in which we
carefully and conscientiously
walk; or, in the way of thy
chastisements. As we, thy
people, have loved and served
thee, when thou didst make our
way smooth and pleasant before
us, so we have not forsaken
thee, but waited upon thee, when
thou didst see fit, for our
trial, to make it difficult and
troublesome. We have possessed
our souls in patience under thy
chastisements, and have waited
thy time for our deliverance.
The desire of our soul is to thy
name — Hebrew, to thy name and
thy memory; that is, to the
remembrance of thy nature and
attributes, according as thou
hast made thyself known by thy
word and works. And so the sense
of this clause is, our
affections are not alienated
from thee by thy judgments, but
we still continue to desire thy
presence and favour, and we
support and comfort ourselves
with the remembrance of what
thou art, and what thou hast
done, and what thou hast
promised to be to, and do for,
thy people. With my soul —
Sincerely and most
affectionately; have I desired
thee — The prophet speaks this
in the name of all God’s people;
in the night — In the time of
affliction, often termed night,
or darkness; or, rather, in the
night, properly so called, as
appears from the next clause,
wherein early, or in the
morning, is opposed to it. When
others are sleeping, my thoughts
and desires are working toward
thee. Yea, with my spirit within
me — By fervent and importunate
prayer for thy loving-kindness;
will I seek thee early — Betimes
in the morning. For when thy
judgments are in the earth — And
good reason it is that we should
thus desire and seek thee in the
way of thy judgments, because
this is the very design of thy
judgments, that men should
thereby be awakened to learn and
return to their duty; and this
is a common effect of them, that
those who have been careless in
prosperity are made wiser and
better by afflictions.
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 26:10-11. Let favour be
showed to the wicked — If thou
dost spare them, when thou
chastisest thy own people, and
grantest them health,
prosperity, and other blessings;
yet will they not learn
righteousness — They will not be
led to repentance by thy
goodness; and therefore it is
requisite thou shouldest send
thy judgments into the earth, to
reckon with men for abused
mercies. In the land of
uprightness — Even in thy
church, and among thy people,
where righteousness is taught,
professed, and, among many,
practised; and where
unrighteousness is
discountenanced and punished;
will he — The wicked man, deal
unjustly — Hebrew, יעול, will
act perfidiously, perversely, or
injuriously; and will not behold
the majesty of the Lord —
Although God gives such plain
and clear discoveries of his
majesty and glory, not only in
his words, but also in his
works, and in all the
dispensations of his providence,
whether those of justice, or
those of grace; and especially
in his glorious patience and
mercy toward wicked men; yet
they wilfully shut their eyes
against these discoveries, and
will not believe, or will not
consider, and lay to heart, what
a God of terrible and glorious
majesty he is. Lord, when thy
hand is lifted up — To smite and
chastise them, in order that by
repentance, faith, and prayer,
they may make their peace with
thee; they will not see — They
will not take notice of it; are
not aware that thou art angry
with them, and about to execute
thy judgments upon them. Nay,
even when thou dost actually
smite and punish them, they are
guilty of the same obstinate
blindness as when thou dost only
threaten them, shutting their
eyes against the clearest
convictions of guilt and wrath,
and ascribing to chance, common
fate, or second causes, what is
manifestly a divine correction
and rebuke. They regard not the
symptoms of their own ruin, but
cry, “Peace, peace,” when thou,
the holy and righteous God, art
waging war against them. But
they shall see — Whether they
will or not. They shall know and
feel, and that by sad
experience, what they would not
learn by other and easier ways.
Atheists, scorners, and the
carnally secure shall shortly
feel what now they will not
believe, that it is a fearful
thing to fall into the hands of
the living God. They will not
see the evil of sin, and
particularly the sin of hating
and persecuting the people of
God; but they shall, at length,
be convinced to their sorrow, by
the tokens of God’s displeasure
against them for it, that what
is done against his people, God
takes as done against himself.
And be ashamed for their envy at
the people — They shall see that
they have done God’s people a
great deal of wrong, and
therefore shall be ashamed of
it, and of the enmity and envy
which produced it. Yea, the fire
of thine enemies, &c. — Such
fire or wrath as thou usest to
pour forth upon thy implacable
enemies.
Verse 12
Isaiah 26:12. Lord, thou wilt
ordain peace for us — That is,
for thy true and genuine church
and people. Though thou hast
afflicted us, (Isaiah 26:8.) yet
the time will come when we shall
be in a very different, yea, in
a happy condition. Or, referring
to what he had last said, he
means, as thou wilt destroy
thine and our enemies, so thou
wilt bless us; thy people, with
peace and prosperity. For thou
hast wrought all our works in us
— Hebrew, לנו, to, or for us.
All the good works done by us
are the effects of thy grace.
And all the good and great works
which have been wrought for us,
all the wonderful deliverances
and singular blessings
vouchsafed us, came from thee.
The argument is this: God hath
done great things for us, and
delivered us formerly upon many
occasions, and therefore he will
still deliver us, and give us
peace.
Verse 13-14
Isaiah 26:13-14. O Lord our God,
&c. — The people of God, having
already obtained their
deliverance in part, with the
overthrow and destruction of
their enemies, proceed to unfold
and express their hope, that God
would perfect all his good works
for them. Other lords besides
thee — Who art our only King,
Lawgiver, and Judge; and besides
those governors who have been
appointed over us by thee, and
have ruled us in subordination
to thee; even foreign and
heathen lords, such as the
Philistines formerly, and lately
the Assyrians, and afterward (as
the prophet foresaw would come
to pass) the Babylonians, have
had dominion, over us — Have
exercised a tyrannical power
over us. The reader will
observe, the song begun, Isaiah
26:1, is continued, and Isaiah
is foretelling what the language
of the church would be after her
deliverance. By thee only — By
thy favour and help, by which
alone we have been rescued from
the tyranny of our enemies, and
not by our merits or strength;
will we make mention of thy name
—
Celebrate thy praise, and trust
in thee for the future. Bishop
Lowth renders the clause, Thee
only, and thy name, henceforth
will we celebrate. They are
dead, &c., they shall not rise —
Those tyrants are destroyed,
they shall never live or rise
again to molest us. He probably
refers to the miraculous
destruction of Sennacherib’s
army before Jerusalem, and to
the overthrow of the Babylonian
empire. Therefore hast thou
visited and destroyed them, &c.
— That they might be thus
effectually destroyed thou didst
undertake the work; and thou
hast perfectly accomplished it,
and abolished the monuments or
memorials of their greatness and
glory. The prophet speaks of
what he foresaw, with certainty,
would be done, as though it were
effected already.
Verse 15
Isaiah 26:15. Thou hast
increased the nation — Namely,
the Jewish nation, which
multiplied exceedingly in Egypt,
and afterward in Canaan, so that
they filled the land. But the
prophet perhaps foretels their
increase after their return from
captivity in Babylon; and, as
some think, that increase of the
church (called the righteous
nation, Isaiah 26:2) which was
to take place in gospel days.
Thou art glorified — In
faithfully fulfilling thy
promises made to Abraham
concerning the multiplication of
his seed, and making him the
father of many nations. Thou
hast removed it far unto all the
ends of the earth — Thou hast
scattered thy people over all
the world, so that they are
found in every nation under
heaven, where they are witnesses
for thee, the only living and
true God, against idolaters of
all descriptions. This was the
case before, and at the time of
the coming of the Messiah, and
of the opening of the gospel
dispensation, Acts 2:5. And in a
little time, the Gentiles being
called into the church of God,
the Christians were spread over
all parts of the Roman empire,
and far beyond its utmost
limits, and they were much more
faithful witnesses or the truth
than the Jews had ever been.
But, as the Hebrew of the first
clause of this verse, יספת לגוי,
when literally rendered, is
only, thou hast added to the
nation; some think the prophet
does not speak of adding to
their number, or increasing
them, but rather of adding to
their plagues or chastisements.
This, it must be acknowledged,
would agree well with what
follows. Then the interpretation
of the next clauses would be,
Thy justice is glorified in
their punishment, and thou hast
removed them out of their own
land, and suffered them to be
carried captive to the ends of
the earth. This, as the reader
will easily observe, would
accord perfectly with what
follows to the end of the
chapter.
Verses 16-18
Isaiah 26:16-18. O Lord, in
trouble — Amidst the various
calamities brought upon them for
their correction and especially
in their captivity; have they —
Namely, thy people; visited thee
— Come into thy presence with
their prayers and supplications;
they poured out a prayer —
Prayed much and earnestly, as
the expression implies; when thy
chastening was upon them — When
thou wast punishing them for
their sins. Like as a woman is
in pain, &c. — A comparison
often used to express men’s
consternation under great
calamities, from which they
cannot deliver themselves; so
have we been in thy sight — Such
has been our anguish and danger,
of which thou, O Lord, hast been
a witness. We have been with
child — That is, we have had
great expectation of a speedy
and happy deliverance, have been
big with hopes; and we have been
in pain — Have comforted
ourselves with this, that the
joyful birth would make us
forget our misery, but, alas! we
have, as it were, brought forth
wind — We have had the torment
of a woman in child-bearing, but
not the comfort of a living
child. “We have had no good
issue of all our pangs and
throes; they did not produce
deliverance and ease, as in the
case of travailing women, but
all our own labours proved
abortive: in vain we struggled
with our enemies, who were still
too mighty for us,” and we were
utterly unable to effect our
deliverance. To bring forth
wind, is much the same kind of
phrase with feeding on wind, and
reaping wind, Hosea 12:1; Hosea
8:7; and signifies, to take a
great deal of pains to no
purpose. This seems to be spoken
of the siege which the Jewish
people endured, and of all their
other labours and sufferings to
prevent their coming under the
Chaldean yoke. Thus the attempt
of Zedekiah to withstand
Nebuchadnezzar we find only
brought greater evils upon the
country, 2 Chronicles 36:13. We
have not wrought any deliverance
in the earth — In our land,
where we had far greater
advantages than we could have
had elsewhere. Neither have the
inhabitants of the world — The
Assyrians, Chaldeans, or our
other enemies; fallen — By our
means.
Verse 19
Isaiah 26:19. Thy dead men shall
live — The prophet here,
speaking in the name of God,
turns his speech to God’s
church, and gives her a cordial
to support her in that deep
distress which he had foretold
she should suffer, and which is
described in the preceding
verse. Thy dead men are not like
those mentioned Isaiah 26:14,
for they shall not live, as was
there said, but thine shall
live. You shall certainly be
delivered from all your fears
and dangers. For here, as Bishop
Lowth observes, “The deliverance
of the people of God, from a
state of the lowest depression,
is explained by images taken
from the resurrection of the
dead.” And nothing is more
frequent, both in Scripture and
other authors, than for great
calamities to be compared to
death, and deliverance from them
to reviving, a resurrection, and
life; and particularly the
captivity of the Jews in
Babylon, and their deliverance
out of it, is largely expressed
by this very similitude, Ezekiel
37:11, &c. “It appears from
hence,” says Bishop Lowth, “that
the doctrine of the resurrection
was at that time a popular and
common doctrine; for an image
which is assumed, in order to
express or represent any thing
in the way of allegory, or
metaphor, whether poetical or
prophetical, must be an image
commonly known and understood,
otherwise it will not answer the
purpose for which it is
assumed.” Together with my dead
body shall they arise — It is to
be observed here, that the
words, together with, are
supplied by our translation,
there being nothing for them in
the Hebrew. “All the ancient
versions,” says Bishop Lowth,
“render the word in the plural;
they read נבלותי, my dead
bodies.” The Vulgate has it,
Interfecti mei resurgent, My
slain men shall rise. The Syriac
and Chaldaic read, their dead
bodies; and the LXX.
εγερθησονται οι εν τοις
μνημειοις, those that are in
their graves shall be raised. It
seems this clause is added
merely as an amplification or
repetition of the former, being
entirely equivalent therewith,
and expressing only that the
Jewish Church, with which the
prophet connects himself, as
being a member of it, should be
delivered out of captivity in
Babylon, but not that he himself
should either personally suffer
in that captivity, or have a
part in that deliverance. Thus,
in a similar way, (1
Thessalonians 4:15; 1
Thessalonians 4:17,) the apostle
connects himself with those that
should be found alive at
Christ’s second coming, we who
are alive, &c., certainly not
intending to signify that he
personally should be alive at
that time. Awake, &c. — Out of
your sleep, even the sleep of
death, ye that dwell in the dust
— You that are dead and buried
in the earth. For thy dew — The
favour and blessing of God upon
thee; is as the dew of herbs —
Which refreshes and revives
them, and makes them grow and
flourish. And the earth shall
cast out the dead — As an
abortive birth is cast out of
the womb, to which the grave is
compared, Job 1:21. But, as the
verb תפיל, here used, does not
properly signify to cast out,
but to cast down, or cause to
fall, these words are by many,
both ancient and later
interpreters, rendered
otherwise, namely, thou wilt
cast down, or she, that is, the
church, shall cast down the land
of the giants, or violent ones.
Thus the Vulgate: Thou shalt
draw into ruin the land of the
giants; and the LXX., η δε γη
των ασεβων πεσειται, the land of
the ungodly shall fall, or be
brought down. The sense is, the
church shall prevail against all
oppressors, and shall cast them
down: when brought low she shall
rise, but her enemies shall not.
Verse 20-21
Isaiah 26:20-21. Come, my
people, &c. — These two verses
are supposed not to belong to
the song which takes up the
preceding part of the chapter,
but to be an address of the
prophet to the people of God on
the contents of it. Having
foretold their wonderful
deliverance, and the utter
destruction of their enemies,
lest they should suppose that
these predictions would
immediately begin to be
fulfilled, and thereby should
meet with a disappointment,
which might shake their faith
respecting the future fulfilment
of them, he here warns them that
they must first expect storms,
and exhorts them to prepare for
them, and patiently to wait
God’s time for the
accomplishment of his promises.
Enter thou into thy chambers,
&c. — Withdraw thyself from the
company and conversation of the
people of the world, lest,
partaking with them in their
sins, thou shouldst also partake
of their plagues; and shut thy
doors about thee — Separate and
seclude thyself, as far as may
be, from men and things, and
give thyself up to meditation on
these awful dispensations of
divine justice and mercy, and to
prayer. Having entered into thy
closet, and shut thy door, pour
out thy supplications and
intercessions before thy Father,
who seeth in secret. Hide
thyself, as it were — In this
time of danger and calamity,
when the judgments of God are so
awfully abroad in the earth, put
thyself under the protection of
his providence and grace, by
faith and prayer. He alludes to
the common practice of men, who,
when there are storms or dangers
abroad, betake themselves to
their houses or chambers for
safety: or, it may be, to the
history, Exodus 9:19-20; or, to
the command of Moses to the
Israelites, (Exodus 12:22,) not
to go out of the doors of their
houses: while the destroying
angel was going through the land
of Egypt; or, to the like charge
given to Rahab, as the condition
of her preservation, Joshua 2.
For a little moment — Whereby he
intimates, that all their
afflictions, how long and
tedious soever they might seem,
were but short and momentary in
comparison of that happiness
which was reserved for them;
until the indignation be
overpast — The dreadful effects
of God’s anger, mentioned in the
next verse. For the Lord cometh
out of his place — Cometh down
from heaven, which, in
Scripture, he is frequently said
to do, when he undertakes any
great and glorious work, either
of delivering his people or
destroying their enemies. The
expression is borrowed from the
manner of princes, who come out
of their palaces either to sit
in judgment, or to fight against
their enemies, both which things
God is here represented as
doing. To punish the inhabitants
of the earth — All the enemies
of God and of his people; for
their iniquity — For all their
sins, and especially for
oppressing and persecuting his
church. The earth also shall
disclose her blood — The
innocent blood which hath been
shed upon the earth shall be
brought to light, and shall be
severely revenged upon the
murderers. |