Verse 1
Isaiah 35:1. The wilderness and
solitary place, &c. — As the
land of the church’s enemies,
which had enjoyed many external
blessings and comforts, shall be
turned into a desolate
wilderness, as was declared in
the foregoing chapter, so, on
the contrary, Emmanuel’s land,
or the seat of God’s church and
people, which formerly was
barren and despised, like a
wilderness, shall flourish
exceedingly. We have more than
once had occasion to observe,
that by the wilderness is
generally meant the Gentile
world: now, it is here foretold,
that, through the influence of
the gospel and the grace of God,
it should put on a new face, and
become like a pleasant and
fruitful garden; that multitudes
of converts to the true religion
should be made therein, and a
vast number of spiritual and
holy worshippers should be
raised up to God in it. Some,
indeed, would interpret this
chapter as referring merely to
the flourishing state of
Hezekiah’s kingdom in the latter
part of his reign, or to the
cultivation of Judea again after
the return of the Jews from the
captivity of Babylon. But, as
Bishop Lowth observes, that it
has a view beyond any such
events as these, “is plain from
every part, especially from the
middle of it, where the
miraculous works wrought by our
blessed Saviour are so clearly
specified that we cannot avoid
making the application. And our
Saviour himself has, moreover,
plainly referred to this very
passage, as speaking of him and
his works, Matthew 11:4-5. He
bids the disciples of John to go
and report to their Master the
things which they heard and saw;
that the blind receive their
sight, &c., and leaves it to him
to draw the conclusion in answer
to his inquiry, whether he, who
performed the very works which
the prophets foretold should be
performed by the Messiah, was
not indeed the Messiah himself.
And where are these works so
distinctly marked by any of the
prophets as in this place? And
how could they be marked more
distinctly? To these the
strictly literal interpretation
of the prophet’s words directs
us. According to the allegorical
interpretation, they may have a
further view; and this part of
the prophecy may run parallel
with the former, and relate to
the future advent of Christ; to
the conversion of the Jews, and
their restitution to their land;
to the extension and
purification of the Christian
faith, events predicted in
Scripture as preparatory to it.”
We may conclude, therefore, with
certainty, that as the
slaughters and desolations
foretold in the former chapter
look far beyond the calamities
brought on Idumea and the
neighbouring nations, by the
Assyrians or Chaldeans; so does
the bright and pleasant picture
of the prosperity and happiness
of God’s people, drawn in this
chapter, look far beyond any
felicity experienced by the
Jews, either in any part of
Hezekiah’s reign, or after the
return from Babylon. It is
undoubtedly the flourishing
state of the kingdom of Christ,
or of the gospel church,
composed of Jews and Gentiles,
which is here predicted, and
especially as it shall exist in
the latter days, after the
destruction of all the anti-christian
powers, when the fulness of the
Gentiles shall be brought in,
and all Israel shall be saved.
Verse 2
Isaiah 35:2. It shall blossom
abundantly, and rejoice — Great
shall be the prosperity and
felicity of God’s church in
these gospel days. Spiritual
blessings are often set forth
under the emblems of
fruitfulness and plenty, as the
reader may see, Isaiah 4:2;
Isaiah 30:23; Isaiah 32:15, and
elsewhere. The glory of Lebanon
shall be given unto it, &c. —
The prophet goes on to express
the great change which should be
made in the Gentile world by the
gospel. For Lebanon was a
mountain famous for its
excellent cedars, Carmel was a
most delightful woody mountain,
and Sharon a most pleasant place
for pasture; so that all these
added together express great
excellence: as if he had said,
Whatever was valuable and
desirable in the Mosaic economy
shall be translated into, and
appear in perfection in, the
gospel of Christ; and the
Gentile world, formerly a
wilderness, shall be as much
enriched with spiritual
blessings, and be as fruitful in
all the graces and virtues which
belong to true and genuine
religion, as ever Judea was, and
abundantly more. They — Who
formerly were in the wilderness
of heathenism; shall see the
glory of the Lord — The glorious
discoveries and effects of God’s
power and goodness to his
people.
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 35:3-4. Strengthen ye the
weak hands — Ye prophets and
ministers of God, comfort and
encourage his people, who are
now ready to faint, with hopes
of that salvation which, in due
time, he will work for them. The
prophet mentions hands and
knees, because the strength or
weakness of any man eminently
appears in those parts. Say to
them that are of a fearful heart
— Who, because of their own
weakness and the strength of
their enemies, are discouraged
and cast down: Hebrew, לנמהרי לב,
that are hasty of heart, that
are for betaking themselves to
flight, upon the first alarm,
and for giving up the cause. Be
strong, fear not — Resist your
fears, confide in the power,
love, and faithfulness of God,
who has promised to deliver
those that trust in him, and has
engaged, that as your day is
your strength shall be, and you
shall become strong. Behold,
your God will come — Though he
seem to be absent, and to have
departed from you, he will come
and abide with you. He will come
with vengeance — Namely, upon
your enemies; and save you — The
destruction he brings upon your
enemies will be the means of
your deliverance and salvation.
If we suppose this to be spoken
with any reference to the state
of the Jews in Babylon, God
avenged them when he overthrew
the Babylonish empire, and
brought them back to their own
land. But, undoubtedly, the
words are primarily intended of
the coming of the Messiah in the
flesh, and of the redemption and
deliverance of God’s people
through him; that is, of such as
embraced Christianity, whom God
signally avenged for all the
malice and cruelty which the
Jews had exercised upon them,
when, by the Romans, he laid
Jerusalem even with the ground,
and cut off many hundreds of
thousands of them by the sword,
by famine, and other ways, for
their obstinate rejection of the
gospel, and crucifying of their
Messiah. Thus Christ is said to
have been set for the fall, as
well as rising again, of many in
Israel.
Verses 5-7
Isaiah 35:5-7. Then the eyes of
the blind shall be opened — The
poor Gentiles, who before were
blind and deaf, shall now have
the eyes and ears of their minds
opened to see God’s works, and
to hear and receive his word.
And, in token hereof, many
persons who are literally and
corporally blind and deaf, shall
have sight and hearing
miraculously conferred upon
them; all which things being so
fully accomplished in Christ,
and, as has been just observed,
applied by him to himself, it is
plain that this prophecy belongs
primarily to the times of the
gospel. Then shall the lame leap
as a hart — For joy, or shall
proceed readily and nimbly in
the way of duty. And the tongue
of the dumb shall sing — The
praises of his Redeemer and
Saviour. For in the wilderness
shall waters break out — The
most dry and barren places shall
be made moist and fruitful:
which is principally meant of
the plentiful effusion of God’s
grace upon such persons and
nations as had been wholly
destitute of it. In the
habitation of dragons shall be
grass, &c. — Those dry and
parched deserts, in which
dragons have their abode, shall
yield abundance of grass, and
reeds, and rushes, which grow
only in moist ground. Thus it
was when Christian churches were
planted and flourished in the
cities of the Gentiles, which
for many ages had been
habitations of dragons, or
rather of devils, Revelation
18:2. When the property of the
idols’ temples was altered, and
they were converted to the
service of Christianity, then
the habitations of dragons
became fruitful fields.
Verse 8
Isaiah 35:8. And a highway shall
be there, and a way — The
highway and the way are not to
be taken for two different ways,
but for one and the same way,
even a cast-way, which is both
raised ground, as the former
Hebrew word מסלול signifies, and
a way for persons to travel in,
as the latter word here used
means, both signifying a
convenient, prepared, plain, and
common road or path for
travellers; namely, the way of
truth and duty marked out by the
gospel, which is the rule both
of our faith and practice. “The
knowledge of the truth and will
of God,” says Mr. Scott, “when
made very plain and clear to any
people, is like casting up a
highway through a country that
was before impassable. The
Gentile world was a desert, in
this as well as in other
respects; no highway to God, and
heaven was to be there met with.
But this advantage began to be
vouchsafed to the nations when
the gospel was sent to them,”
and the way of duty was plainly
marked out. And it shall be
called, The way of holiness —
Trodden by holy men, and filled
with holy practices; the way of
holy worship, and a holy
conversation. The way of
holiness is that course of
religious duties in which men
ought to walk and press forward,
with an eye to the glory of God
and their own felicity, in the
enjoyment of him. It is “not a
way of sufferance,” says Henry,
“but an appointed way, a way
into which we are directed by a
divine authority, and in which
we are protected by a divine
warrant: it is the king’s, yea,
the King of kings’ highway, in
which we may be waylaid, but
cannot be stopped. It is the
good old way, (Jeremiah 6:16,)
the way of God’s commandments.
The unclean shall not pass over
it — Either to defile it, or to
disturb those that walk in it.
It is a way by itself,
distinguished from the way of
the world; for it is a way of
separation from, and
nonconformity to, this world.”
The expression further means,
that unclean persons shall, by a
proper exercise of good
discipline, be kept out of
Christ’s church on earth, as
they certainly shall not be
admitted into his kingdom in
heaven. But it shall be for
those — Termed afterward the
redeemed, who shall walk there,
Isaiah 35:9. But Bishop Lowth
and some interpreters think the
clause may be better rendered,
He, namely, God, shall be with
them walking in the way; that
is, he shall be their companion
and guide in the way. Hence,
though fools, they shall not err
therein — The way shall be so
plain and straight, that even
the most foolish travellers
cannot easily mistake it.
Verse 9
Isaiah 35:9. No lion shall be
there, &c. — It shall not only
be a plain, but a safe way. They
that keep close to God in this
way, keep out of the reach of
Satan, the roaring lion: that
wicked one toucheth them not;
nor shall any of their other
spiritual enemies be suffered to
destroy, subdue, or bring them
into bondage. They may proceed
with a holy security and
serenity of mind, and may be
quiet from the fear of evil.
This is the same promise with
that of Isaiah 11:9 : They shall
not hurt nor destroy in all my
holy mountain.
Verse 10
Isaiah 35:10. And the ransomed
of the Lord — They whom God
shall rescue from their
captivity and slavery in
Babylon, say some; shall return
and come to Zion — Shall be
restored to their own land, from
whence they had been carried
captive. But the following
expressions are far too
magnificent and emphatical to be
answered by the mere return of
the Jews to Judea and Jerusalem,
which was accompanied and
followed by many sighs and
sorrows, as appears both from
sacred and profane historians.
We must, therefore, of
necessity, understand this verse
as being intended, like the
preceding verses, of gospel
times, and therefore by the
ransomed of the Lord we must
understand those who are
delivered from the guilt and
power of sin, and from every
kind of spiritual bondage,
whether to the devil, the world,
or the flesh. These may be said
to return, and come to Zion,
with songs, when they unite
themselves to God’s church and
people on earth, and more
especially when they arrive at
the heavenly Canaan, and are
admitted into the New Jerusalem,
the city of the living God, and
incorporated in a glorious
society, with an innumerable
company of angels, and the
spirits of just men made
perfect; with the general
assembly and church of the
firstborn, who are written in
heaven. Then, indeed, are their
heads crowned with everlasting
joy; and they obtain joy and
gladness in perfection, and
sorrow and sighing flee away for
ever. Thus these prophecies,
which relate to the Assyrian
invasion, conclude, for the
support of the people of God,
under that and other subsequent
calamities, and to direct their
joy, in their deliverance from
them, to something higher. And
thus should our joyful hopes and
cheering prospects of eternal
life swallow up both all the
joys and all the sorrows of this
present time. |