Verse 1
Isaiah 44:1-2. Yet now hear, O
Jacob — Although I have
chastised thee for thy sins, and
had just cause utterly to
destroy thee, yet in judgment I
will remember mercy, and will
still own thee for my servant
and chosen people. Thus saith
the Lord, that formed thee from
the womb — “He speaks of the
Jewish people under the
character of a single person;
and as God sometimes designed
certain persons for particular
offices, from their birth, or
conception, so he set apart the
posterity of Abraham to be his
people from the very original of
the family;” and formed and
fashioned them for himself, by
laws, ordinances, teachers,
promises, threatenings,
corrections, and many other
ways. Jesurun is another name
for Jacob or Israel, given to
them by Moses, Deuteronomy
32:15, (where see the note.) and
33:5, 26.
Verses 3-5
Isaiah 44:3-5. I will pour water
— My Spirit, as it is expounded
in the latter part of the verse,
frequently compared to water in
the Scriptures; upon him that is
thirsty — That is destitute of
it, and that sincerely and
earnestly desires it; and my
blessing upon thine offspring —
All the blessings of my
covenant, especially those of a
spiritual nature. This promise
seems to have been made with a
design to raise the minds and
hearts of the Jews from carnal
and worldly things, to which
they were too much addicted, to
spiritual and heavenly
blessings, and thereby to
prepare them for the reception
of the gospel. And they shall
spring up, &c. — They shall
increase and flourish like
grass, and those herbs and
plants which grow up in the
midst of it. One shall say, I am
the Lord’s, &c. — This verse
seems to relate to the increase
of the church by the accession
of the Gentiles: as if he had
said, The blessing of God upon
the Jews shall be so remarkable
that many of the Gentiles shall
join themselves unto them, and
accept Jehovah for their God,
and own themselves for his
people.
Verses 6-8
Isaiah 44:6-8. Thus saith the
Lord, &c. — Here God renews his
contest with idols, which he
insists an so often, and so
much, because his own people
were exceeding prone to
idolatry. And who — Which of all
the heathen gods; shall call,
and shall declare it — Shall, by
his powerful call, cause a
future event to be, and, by his
infinite foreknowledge, declare
that it shall be. And set it in
order for me — Orderly relate
all future events in the same
manner as they shall happen.
Since I appointed the ancient
people — αφ’ ου εποιησα ανθρωπον.
Since I first made man upon the
earth: so the LXX. And the
things that are coming, &c. —
Such things as are near at hand,
and such as are to come
hereafter. Have not I told thee?
— Thee, O Israel, whom he bids
not to fear. The sense is, I
call you Israelites to bear me
witness, whether I have not,
from time to time, acquainted
you with things to come; from
that time — When I appointed the
ancient people, (Isaiah 44:7,)
from the first ages of the
world. And have declared it —
Have published it to the world
in my sacred records. Ye are
even my witnesses — Both of my
predictions, and of the exact
agreeableness of events to them.
Verses 9-11
Isaiah 44:9-11. They that make a
graven image are vanity — Hereby
discover themselves to be vain,
empty, and foolish men. And
their delectable things shall
not profit — Their idols, in
which they take so much
pleasure. They are their own
witnesses — They that make them
are witnesses against themselves
and against their idols, because
they know they are not gods, but
the work of their own hands.
They see not, nor know — Have
neither sense nor understanding,
therefore they have just cause
to be ashamed of their folly in
worshipping such senseless
things. Who hath formed a god,
&c. — What man in his wits would
do it? Behold, all his fellows
shall be ashamed — The workmen
who, in this work, are partners
with him, by whose cost and
command the work is done; or
those who any way assist in this
work, and join with him in
worshipping the image which he
makes. They are of men — They
are of mankind, and therefore
cannot possibly make a god. They
shall be ashamed together —
Though all combine together,
they shall be filled with fear
and confusion when God shall
plead his cause against them.
Verses 12-17
Isaiah 44:12-17. The smith, &c.
— “The sacred writers,” says
Bishop Lowth, “are generally
large and eloquent upon the
subject of idolatry: they treat
it with great severity, and set
forth the absurdity of it in the
strongest light. But this
passage of Isaiah far exceeds
any thing that ever was written
upon the subject, in force of
argument, energy of expression,
and elegance of composition. One
or two of the apocryphal writers
have attempted to imitate the
prophet, but with very ill
success: Wisdom of Solomon
13:11-19; Wisdom of Solomon
15:7, &c.; Baruk, chap. 6.;
especially the latter, who,
injudiciously dilating his
matter, and introducing a number
of minute circumstances, has
very much weakened the force and
effect of his invective. On the
contrary, a heathen author, in
the ludicrous way, has, in a
line or two, given idolatry one
of the severest strokes it ever
received:
“Olim truncus eram ficulnus,
inutile lignum;
Cum faber, incertus scamnum
faceretne Priapum, Maluit esse
Deum.”
“I was of old the trunk of a
fig-tree, a useless block;
when the carpenter, uncertain
whether to make a bench or a
Priapus, chose that I should be
a god.” — Hor., lib. 1. sat. 8.
He maketh it after the figure of
a man, &c. — In the same comely
shape and proportions which are
in a living man; that it may
remain in the house — In the
dwelling-house of him that made
it. He heweth him down cedars
and the oak — Which afford the
best and most durable timber;
which he strengtheneth for
himself — He plants, and with
care and diligence improves
those trees, that he or his
posterity may thence have
materials for their images, and
those things which belong to
them. He maketh an image, and
falleth down thereto — Having
related the practices of
idolaters, he now discovers the
vanity and folly of them, that
they make their fire and their
god of the same materials,
distinguished only by the art of
man, and roast their meat with
the article which they worship.
Verses 18-20
Isaiah 44:18-20. They have not
known, &c. — They want common
discretion, and have not the
understanding of a rational
being in them. For what an
absurdity is it for a man to
dress his meat and make his god
with the same piece of wood! Or
to think that a log of timber
hath any more divinity in it
than it had before, because of
the form man can give it, or any
thing he can do to it! “When,”
says Minutius Felix, “does it
become a god! Behold, it is
cast, fashioned, and carved! It
is not yet a god. It is
soldered, put together, and set
up. Neither is it yet a god.
Behold, it is adorned,
consecrated, and prayed to! Then
at length it is a god when men
have chosen and dedicated it.”
He hath shut their eyes — God
hath. Not as if God made men
wicked; he only permits them so
to be, and orders and overrules
their wickedness to his own
glorious ends. And none
considereth in his heart — By
which the prophet implies, that
the true cause of this, as well
as of other absurd and brutish
practices of sinners, is the
neglect of serious and impartial
consideration. He feedeth on
ashes — An unprofitable and
pernicious food, and no less
unsatisfying and mischievous is
the worship of idols. A deceived
heart — A mind corrupted and
deceived by deep prejudice,
gross error, and especially by
his own lusts; hath turned him
aside — From the way of truth,
from the knowledge and worship
of the true God, unto this
irrational and foolish idolatry;
that he cannot deliver his soul
— From this error, and the
vengeance that will follow upon
it; nor say, Is there not a lie,
&c. — Is not this idol which I
honour and trust to a mere
fiction and delusion which will
deceive me?
Verses 21-23
Isaiah 44:21-23. Remember these
— These things, the deep
ignorance and stupidity of
idolaters. O Israel, thou shalt
not be forgotten — I will not
forget nor forsake thee;
therefore thou shalt have no
need of idols. I have blotted
out as a cloud, &c. — As the sun
arising disperses the clouds,
and causes them to vanish and
disappear, so have I, arising
for thy salvation, with the
light and influence of my grace,
scattered and removed thy
transgressions, that there is no
remnant or appearance of them
left: a beautiful and expressive
metaphor. Return unto me — From
thine idolatry, and other sinful
practices. For 1 have redeemed
thee — Therefore thou art mine,
and obliged to return and adhere
to me. Sing, O ye heavens, &c. —
“The prophet here, by an elegant
apostrophe, calls upon all
creatures to glorify God for his
singular blessing to his people
in delivering them from their
captivity in Babylon; which also
has a further respect to the
great and spiritual deliverance
of mankind by the Messiah;” a
mercy so transcendent, that, as
he intimates, it is sufficient,
were it possible, to make even
the stones break forth in
praises to God.
Verses 24-27
Isaiah 44:24-27. I am the Lord
that maketh all things — And
therefore I can save thee
without the help of any other
gods, or any creature; that
frustrateth the tokens of the
liars — Of the magicians and
astrologers, who were numerous
and greatly esteemed in Babylon,
and who had foretold the long
continuance and prosperity of
the Chaldean empire. And maketh
the diviners mad — With grief
for the disappointment of their
predictions, and their disgrace
which followed it. That turneth
wise men backward — Stopping
their way, and blasting their
designs. That confirmeth the
word of his servants — The
prophets, as appears from the
next clause, namely, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, and others, whom God
sent to foretel the destruction
of Babylon, and the redemption
of his people. The connection of
this with Isaiah 44:25, is, As
God discovers the folly and
madness of such false prophets,
so he punctually fulfils the
predictions of his own prophets.
That saith to the deep, Be dry —
That with a word can dry up the
sea and rivers, and remove all
impediments. “Cyrus took Babylon
by laying the bed of the
Euphrates dry, and leading his
army into the city by night,
through the empty channel of the
river. This remarkable
circumstance, in which the event
so exactly corresponded with the
prophecy, was also noted by
Jeremiah. A drought shall be
upon her waters, and they shall
be dried up: I will lay her sea
dry; and I will scorch up her
springs, Jeremiah 50:38;
Jeremiah 51:36. It is proper
here to give some account of the
method by which the stratagem of
Cyrus was effected. The
Euphrates, in the middle of
summer, from the melting of the
snows on the mountains of
Armenia, like the Nile,
overflows the country. In order
to diminish the inundation, and
carry off the waters, two canals
were made by Nebuchadnezzar a
hundred miles above the city;
the first on the eastern side,
called Naharmalca, or the Royal
river, by which the Euphrates
was let into the Tigris; the
other on the western side,
called Pallacopas, or Naharaga,
(Hebrew, נהר אגם, the river of
the pool,) by which the
redundant waters were carried
into a vast lake, forty miles
square, contrived, not only to
lessen the inundation, but for a
reservoir, with sluices to water
the barren country on the
Arabian side. Cyrus, by turning
the whole river into the latter
lake, laid the channel, where it
ran through the city, almost
dry; so that his army entered it
both above and below by the bed
of the river, the water not
reaching above the middle of the
thigh. By the great quantity of
water let into the lake, the
sluices and dams were destroyed;
and being never repaired
afterward, the waters spread
over the whole country below,
and reduced it into a morass, in
which the river is lost.” —
Bishop Lowth.
Verse 28
Isaiah 44:28. That saith of
Cyrus — Whom God here mentions
by his proper name, two hundred
years before he was born, that
this might be an undeniable
evidence of the exactness of
God’s foreknowledge, and a
convincing argument to conclude
this dispute between God and
idols. He is my shepherd — Him
will I set up to be the shepherd
of my people, to rescue them
from wolves or tyrants, to
gather them together, to rule
them gently, and to provide
comfortably for them. Xenophon
tells us, that Cyrus used to
compare kings in general, and
himself in particular, to a
shepherd. — Cyropæd., lib. 8.
And shall perform all my
pleasure — All that I command
him to do, especially to give
leave and order for the
rebuilding of the city and
temple of Jerusalem, as it here
follows. This prophecy, which
thus speaks of Cyrus by name, as
foreknown and appointed by the
divine counsel for the
performance of the great work
designed by providence, is one
of the most remarkable contained
in Scripture, of the same kind
with that 1 Kings 13:1-2. |