Verses 1-8
Isaiah 38:1-8. In those days was
Hezekiah sick — See notes on 2
Kings 20:1-11.
Verse 9
Isaiah 38:9. Grotius is of
opinion that this song was
dictated by Isaiah. But it is
more probable, as Hezekiah was a
truly pious man, and inspired by
the Holy Spirit, that he was
moved thereby to write this form
of thanksgiving, both as a
testimony of his own gratitude
to God, and for the instruction
of future ages.
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 38:10-11. I said — Within
myself; I concluded, in the
cutting off of my days — When my
days were cut off by the
sentence of God, related Isaiah
38:1; I shall go to the gates of
the grave — I perceive that I
must die without any hopes of
prevention. The grave is called
man’s long home, Ecclesiastes
12:5; and the house appointed
for all living, Job 30:23; and
death opens the gates of this
house. I am deprived of the
residue of my years — Which I
might have lived according to
the common course of nature, and
of God’s dispensations; and
which I hoped to live for the
service of God and of my
generation. I shall not see the
Lord — I shall not behold his
beauty and glory as he manifests
them in his temple, in his
oracles and ordinances; I shall
not enjoy him: for seeing is
frequently put for enjoying;
even the Lord in the land of the
living — In this world, which is
often so called; which
limitation is prudently added,
to intimate that he expected to
see God in another place and
manner, on the other side death;
but he despairs of seeing him
any more on this side death, as
he had seen him in the
sanctuary, Psalms 63:2. I shall
behold man no more. &c. — I
shall have no more society with
men upon earth. Many good men,
under the law, had but imperfect
notions of a future state, and
thought it a great unhappiness
to be deprived, by death, of the
communion of saints here upon
earth. But by not seeing the
Lord in the land of the living,
Hezekiah might probably mean
that he should not see the
effects of God’s grace and
goodness in the deliverance of
his people.
Verse 12
Isaiah 38:12. Mine age is
departed — The time of my life
is expired; and is removed as a
shepherd’s tent — Which is
easily and speedily removed: I
have cut off — Namely, by my
sins, provoking God to do it;
or, I have concluded, and
declare that my life is, or will
be, soon cut off: for men are
often said, in the Scriptures,
to do those things that they
only declare and pronounce to be
done; like a weaver my life —
Who cutteth off the web from the
loom, either when it is
finished, or before, according
to his pleasure. He — God; will
cut me off with pining sickness
— With a consuming disease,
wasting my spirits and life;
from day, even till night, wilt
thou make an end of me — That
is, either, 1st, This sickness
will kill me in the space of one
day; or, 2d, Thou dost pursue me
night and day with continual
pains, and wilt not cease till
thou hast made a full end of me;
so that I expect every day will
be my last day. Bishop Lowth
translates this verse: “My
habitation is taken away, and is
removed from me, like a
shepherd’s tent: my life is cut
off, as by the weaver; he will
sever me from the loom; in the
course of the day thou wilt
finish my web.” Vitringa and Dr.
Waterland read the verse nearly
in the same manner, considering
the similitude of the weaver as
being continued to the end of
it.
Verse 13-14
Isaiah 38:13-14. I reckoned till
morning, &c. — When night came I
reckoned I should die before the
next morning, my pains being as
great as if my bones had been
broken, and the whole frame of
my body crushed by a lion.
Bishop Lowth reads: I roared
until the morning like the lion;
so did he break to pieces all my
bones. Like a crane or a
swallow, &c. — “My pains were
sometimes so violent that they
forced me to cry aloud; at other
times my strength was so
exhausted that I could only
groan inwardly, and bemoan my
unhappy condition in sighs.” I
did mourn as a dove — Whose
mournful tone is observed Isaiah
59:11, and elsewhere; mine eyes
fail with looking upward — While
I lift up my eyes and heart to
God for relief in vain; O Lord,
I am oppressed — Namely, by my
disease, which, like a sergeant,
hath seized upon me, and is
haling me to the prison of the
grave; undertake for me — Stop
the execution, and rescue me out
of his hands.
Verse 15
Isaiah 38:15. What shall I say?
— I want words sufficiently to
express my deep sense of God’s
dealings with me; he hath
spoken, &c. — He foretold it by
his word, and effected it by his
hand. In this verse he seems to
make a transition into the
thanksgiving, which is
undoubtedly contained in the
following verses, and so the
sense is, He hath sent a
gracious message to me, by his
prophet, concerning the
prolongation of my life, and
himself hath made good his word.
Thus the words are understood by
the Chaldee paraphrast, the LXX.,
and by the Syriac and Arabic
interpreters. To this purpose
also Bishop Lowth reads the
clause. He hath given me a
promise, and he hath performed
it. I shall go softly all my
years — I will conduct myself
with humble thankfulness to God
for conferring so great a favour
upon so unworthy a person, as
long as I live. I shall never
forget my unworthiness and his
loving kindness; in the
bitterness of my soul — That is,
or rather, upon, or after it:
or, as the Chaldee paraphrast
reads it, because of my
deliverance from bitterness of
soul.
Verse 16
Isaiah 38:16. By these things
men live — By virtue of thy
gracious word, or promise, and
powerful work; or, by thy
promises, and thy performance of
them: and therefore it is not
strange that one word of God
hath brought me back from the
jaws of death. And in all these
things is the life of my spirit
— As all men’s lives are thy
gift, so I shall always
acknowledge the preservation of
mine to be owing to thy goodness
in promising, and thy
faithfulness in fulfilling thy
promise. So wilt thou recover
me, &c. — Or, for thou hast
recovered me. Thou hast restored
my health and prolonged my life.
— Bishop Lowth.
Verse 17
Isaiah 38:17. Behold, for peace
I had great bitterness — “When I
perceived and feared no evil,
and seemed to enjoy my usual
health, then this terrible evil
came upon me.” The Hebrew,
however, לשׁלום מר לו מר, may be
properly rendered, Behold my
grievous anguish is turned into
ease; or, My great bitterness
was unto peace, that is, became
the occasion of my safety and
comfort, for it drove me to
prayer, and prayer prevailed
with God for a gracious answer,
and the prolonging of my life.
Thou hast in love to my soul,
&c. — That is, in kindness to
me, (the soul being put for the
man,) delivered it from the pit
of corruption — This is an
emphatical circumstance, for
sometimes God prolongs men’s
days in anger, foreknowing that
they will only fill up still
more the measure of their
iniquities. For thou hast cast
all my sins behind thy back —
Thou hast forgiven those sins
that brought this affliction
upon me, and, upon that account,
hast removed the punishment of
them.
Verses 18-20
Isaiah 38:18-20. For the grave
cannot praise thee — The dead
cannot be instruments of
promoting thy glory among men
upon earth, or of making thy
goodness known to others, which
I desire and determine to do.
They cannot hope for thy truth —
Cannot expect nor receive the
accomplishment of thy promised
goodness in this world. The
living, &c., shall praise thee —
They are especially obliged to
do it, and they only have the
privilege of doing it among men
on earth. The father to the
children, &c. — They shall not
only praise thee while they
live, but shall take care to
propagate and perpetuate thy
praise to all succeeding
generations. Or, he means, “Thy
wonderful mercy toward me shall
be recorded for the benefit of
after ages; and fathers shall
mention it to their children, as
an instance of thy
faithfulness.” The Lord was
ready to save me — Was a present
help to me, ready to hear and
succour me upon my praying to
him in my great extremity.
Therefore will we sing my songs
— Both I and my people will sing
those songs of praise which are
due, especially from me, for
God’s great mercy to me; to the
stringed instruments — Or, to
the harp, (as Bishop Lowth
renders it,) which was according
to the custom of those times.
Some infer from this verse that
Hezekiah composed several other
sacred songs, some of which may
be still extant among the
Psalms. All the days of our life
in the house of the Lord — Here
we are taught, that the proper
fruit of deliverance from evil
is thanksgiving, diffusing
itself through all the actions
of our life. This passage
exhibits to us especially a
picture of our duty and state as
Christians, who, redeemed as we
are by the precious blood of the
Son of God from everlasting
destruction, ought, with all the
powers of our souls and bodies,
to celebrate his name and glory,
so that our whole life may
appear one continued
thanksgiving. — Vitringa.
Verse 21-22
Isaiah 38:21-22. For Isaiah had
said, Let them take a lump of
figs — See note on 2 Kings 20:7.
Hezekiah also had said — Or, for
Hezekiah had said; What is the
sign that I shall go up —
Namely, within three days, as is
more fully related 2 Kings 20:5;
2 Kings 20:8; to the house of
the Lord? — For thither he
designed to go first, partly
that he might pay his vows and
thanksgivings to God, and partly
that he might engage the people
to praise God with him and for
him.
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