Verse 1-2
Isaiah 46:1-2. Bel — The chief
idol of the Babylonians, called
by profane historians Jupiter
Belus; boweth down — As the
Babylonians used to bow down to
him to worship him, so now he
bows down, and submits himself
to the victorious Persians. Nebo
stoopeth — Another of their
famous idols, probably a deified
prophet, the word signifying to
deliver oracles, or to prophesy.
The names of these idols were
included in the names of several
of their princes, as Bel, in
Belshazzar; Nebo, in Nabonassar;
Nebuchadnezzar, Nebuzaradan.
Their idols were upon their
beasts — Were taken and broken,
and the materials of them, which
were gold, and silver, and
brass, were carried upon beasts
into Persia. Your carriages — O
ye Persians, to whom he suddenly
turns his speech, were heavy
loaden — With these useless
gods, which were so far from
being able to come forward to
the help of their worshippers,
that they could not move
themselves, but must be dragged
on carriages by cattle. They bow
down together — The Babylonians
and their idols, neither of them
being able to help the other.
They could not deliver the
burden — The Babylonians could
not deliver their idols, which
he now had called a burden; but
themselves are gone into
captivity — They as well as
their idols.
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 46:3-4. Hearken, &c., all
the remnant of the house of
Israel — All that remain of the
twelve tribes. He terms them a
remnant, either because the ten
tribes were already carried into
captivity by Shalmaneser, or
because he addresses that
remnant of the two tribes, which
he foresaw would return from
Babylon; which are borne by me,
&c. — Whom I have nourished and
cared for from time to time,
ever since you were a people,
and came out of Egypt, and that
as affectionately and tenderly
as parents bring up their own
children. Even to hoar hairs
will I carry you — That kindness
which I have shown you, and that
care which I have taken of you,
I will continue to you to the
end, never forsaking you, unless
you wilfully and obstinately
cast me off; which the Jews did
when their Messiah came. I have
made you, and will carry, and
deliver you — You are my
workmanship, both as you are
men, and as you are my peculiar
people; and therefore I will
preserve and deliver you. The
reader will observe, that the
prophet here “very ingeniously,
and with great force, contrasts
the power of God, and his tender
goodness effectually exerted
toward his people with the
inability of the false gods of
the heathen: he, like an
indulgent father, had carried
his people, in his arms, ‘as a
man carrieth his son,’
Deuteronomy 1:31; he had
protected them and delivered
them in their distresses;
whereas the idols of the heathen
were forced to be carried about
themselves, and removed from
place to place, with a great
labour and fatigue to their
worshippers; nor could they
answer, or deliver their
votaries, when they cried unto
them.” See Numbers 11:12.
Verses 5-8
Isaiah 46:5-8. To whom will you
liken me, &c. — If you be
tempted at any time to exchange
me for an idol, do me and
yourselves the right seriously
to consider, whether you can
find another god, who will be
more able and more ready to do
you good than I have been. They
lavish gold &c., and he maketh
it a god — Let us suppose a god
made with the greatest cost and
art. They bear him upon the
shoulder — From that place where
he is made, unto that place
where they intend to set him up.
From his place shall he not
remove — Or, rather, he cannot
remove. He cannot stir, either
hand or foot, to help his
people. Remember this — Consider
these things which I now speak,
O ye Israelites; and show
yourselves men — Act like
reasonable creatures, and be not
so brutish as to worship your
own works: be so wise and
courageous as to withstand all
solicitations to idolatry. Bring
it again to mind, O ye
transgressors — Think of this
again and again, O ye who have
been guilty of this foolish sin,
and who, therefore, are obliged
to take the better heed, lest
you should relapse into it
again.
Verses 9-11
Isaiah 46:9-11. Remember the
former things — What I have done
for you and in the world, my
evident predictions of future
things, justified by the event;
and those other miraculous
works, whereby I have abundantly
proved my divinity. Declaring
the end from the beginning —
Foretelling from the beginning
of the world, or from the
beginning of your nation, those
future events which should
happen in succeeding ages, even
to the end of the world, or to
the end of your commonwealth;
for such predictions we find
delivered by Moses, the first
founder of their state. My
counsel shall stand — As I will
not, so no other power can,
disappoint my purposes and
predictions. This is another
argument urged for the divinity
of the God of Israel, namely,
his foreknowledge and prediction
of future events, of which the
prophet subjoins a particular
instance in the next words.
Calling a ravenous bird, or
eagle, from the east — From
Persia, as Isaiah 41:2. “There
can be no doubt that Cyrus is
here meant. Kings and princes
are often compared in Scripture
to eagles, Jeremiah 49:22;
Ezekiel 17:3. But it has been
thought that there is a peculiar
propriety in this application to
Cyrus, as the eagle well denotes
the magnanimity, the quickness
of judgment, the celerity in all
his expeditions and motions, for
which Cyrus was so remarkable.
We are also told by Plutarch,
that Cyrus had an aquiline nose;
and Xenophon expressly relates,
that his standard was a golden
eagle; which yet continues, says
he, to be the standard of the
Persian kings.” — Vitringa.
Verse 12-13
Isaiah 46:12-13. Hearken unto
me, ye stout-hearted — “God had
addressed those kindly who had
suffered themselves, through
imprudence, to be seduced from
the right way, and whose
conversion might more reasonably
be expected; but he speaks more
severely to the hypocrites, the
incredulous, the fierce and
proud in heart, who obstinately
doubted the completion of his
excellent promises: ‘O you, says
he, who are yourselves far from
faith, truth, integrity, and all
true piety, but full of deceit,
hypocrisy, incredulity, and who
complain that my salvation is
far off, and call my fidelity in
question, hearken to me, and
know that my righteousness, or
justification, is not far off,
but near at hand, and shortly to
be revealed.’” I bring near my
righteousness — Though you are
unrighteous, I will show myself
a righteous and faithful God,
making good my promise of
delivering you out of Babylon
after seventy years. It shall
not be far off — Namely, my work
of saving you from captivity. I
will place salvation in Zion — I
will bring my people from
Babylon to Zion, and there I
will save them from all their
enemies; for Israel my glory —
In whom I will again glory, as
my people, and the illustrious
monuments of my wisdom, power,
truth, and goodness; whom I will
make a great and glorious
people, though now they are mean
and contemptible, and among whom
I will once more settle my
glorious presence and
ordinances. |