Verse 1-2
Isaiah 47:1-2. Come down — From
thy throne; and sit in the dust
— As a mourner for thy
approaching calamities; O virgin
daughter of Babylon — Thou that
art tender and delicate like a
virgin. Sit on the ground — In a
condition the most abject and
degraded. There is no throne —
Namely, for thee. Imperial power
is taken from thee, and
translated to the Persians. Thou
shalt no more be called tender —
Thou shalt be reduced to the
greatest hardships and miseries.
Take the millstones — Thou shalt
be subjected to the basest kind
of slavery, which grinding at
the mill was esteemed; for that
work was most generally
performed by slaves. The reader
will observe, “they used
hand-mills: water-mills were not
invented till a little before
the time of Augustus Cesar:
wind-mills long after. It was
not only the work of slaves to
grind corn, but the hardest
work; and often inflicted upon
them as a severe punishment. And
in the East it was the work of
female slaves, Exodus 11:5;
Exodus 12:29; (in the version of
the LXX.;) Matthew 24:41. And it
is the same to this day. ‘Women
alone,’ says Shaw, p. 297, ‘are
employed to grind their corn.’
‘They are the female slaves,’
says Sir. J. Chardin, ‘that are
generally employed in the East
at those hand-mills: it is
extremely laborious, and
esteemed the lowest employment
in the house.’” — Bishop Lowth.
Uncover thy locks — Take off the
ornaments wherewith such women
as were of good quality used to
cover and dress their heads.
These are predictions of what
they should be forced to do or
suffer. Make bare the leg, &c. —
Gird up thy garments close and
short about thee, that thou
mayest be fit for travelling on
foot, and for passing over those
rivers through which thou wilt
be constrained to wade in the
way to the land of thy
captivity.
Verse 3
Isaiah 47:3. Thy nakedness shall
be uncovered — Either for want
of raiment to cover it, or
rather, by thine enemies in the
way of scorn and contumely. I
will take vengeance — Upon thee,
for thy many and great injuries
done to my people. I will not
meet thee as a man — But like an
Almighty God, whose power thou
canst not resist. I will not
treat thee with moderation and
gentleness, as those men who
have not quite put off humanity
use to do, but like a lion, to
tear thee to pieces: see Hosea
5:14; and Hosea 13:7-8. Thou
shalt feel the most dreadful
effects of my anger, and I will
show no humanity or pity toward
thee. The original expression,
לא אפגע אדם, is peculiar, and is
literally, I will not meet a
man, which may be an inverted
sentence put for, a man shall
not meet me, that is, no man
shall prevent or hinder the
effects of my wrath. Bishop
Lowth renders it, “Neither will
I suffer a man to intercede with
me.”
Verse 4
Isaiah 47:4. As for our
Redeemer, &c. — The words, as
for, not being in the Hebrew
text, Bishop Lowth translates
this verse, “Our Avenger,
Jehovah God of hosts, the Holy
One of Israel, is his name.” And
he observes, “Here a chorus
breaks in upon the midst of the
subject, with a change of
construction as well as
sentiment, from the longer to
the shorter kind of verse; after
which, the former subject and
style are resumed.” The passage
seems to be inserted in the
midst of this prophecy against
Babylon, as Jacob inserts a like
passage in the midst of his
blessings and prophecies
concerning his sons, Genesis
49:18. It gives the reason why
the judgment, here denounced,
should be certainly inflicted,
because he who had undertaken it
was the Lord of hosts, and
therefore able to effect it; and
the Holy One, and the Redeemer
of Israel, whom the Babylonians
had cruelly oppressed, whose
quarrel God would avenge upon
them, and whom he had determined
and promised to deliver out of
their hands. If the words be
considered as a pathetical
exclamation, or acclamation of
God’s people, they thereby
ascribe to God, as their God and
Redeemer, this wonderful work of
breaking the staff of their
oppressors: and they make their
boast of, and celebrate him for,
this glorious deliverance.
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 47:5-6. Sit thou silent —
Through grief and shame, and as
mourners used to do, Job 2:13.
Cease thy vaunting and insolent
speeches. And get thee into
darkness — Thou shalt go into an
obscure, disconsolate, and
calamitous condition. Thou shalt
no more be the lady of kingdoms
— The chief and glory of all
kingdoms; the most large,
potent, and glorious empire of
the world, as thou hast been. I
was wroth with my people — “The
metaphor in this verse,” says
Vitringa, “is taken from a
father, who, being angry with
his children, delivers them up
to chastisement; but his anger
soon subsiding, and his
affection reviving, he turns his
indignation against those who
had so executed his commands, as
to punish immoderately and
severely.” I have polluted mine
inheritance — I cast them away
as an unclean thing; I stained
their glory; I removed them from
the place of my presence and
worship; I banished them into a
polluted land, among unclean
persons, by whom they were many
ways defiled. And given them
into thy hand — To punish them.
Thou didst show them no mercy —
Thou hast exceeded the bounds of
thy commission, and, instead of
that compassion which humanity
teaches men to show to such as
are in misery, thou didst
exercise toward them the
greatest cruelty. Upon the
ancient — The old and feeble,
whose venerable gray hairs
should have been their
sufficient protection; hast thou
very heavily laid thy yoke — Not
considering that, besides the
calamity of being made captives,
they were afflicted with the
miseries of old age, and
therefore required both thy pity
and reverence. It is justly
observed here by Bishop Lowth,
that “God, in the course of his
providence, makes use of great
conquerors and tyrants, as his
instruments, to execute his
judgments in the earth: he
employs one wicked nation to
scourge another. The inflicter
of the punishment may, perhaps,
be as culpable as the sufferer,
and may add to his guilt by
indulging his cruelty in
executing God’s justice. When he
has fulfilled the work to which
divine vengeance has ordained
him, he will become himself the
object of it: see Isaiah
10:5-12. God charges the
Babylonians, though employed by
himself to chastise his people,
with cruelty in regard to them.
They exceeded the bounds of
justice and humanity in
oppressing and destroying them;
and though they were really
executing the righteous decree
of God, yet, as far as it
regarded themselves, they were
only indulging their own
ambition and violence.”
Verse 7-8
Isaiah 47:7-8. Thou sayest, I
shall be a lady for ever — I
shall always be the chief city
and mistress of the world, and
shall never know any change of
condition in this respect. If we
consider that the city of
Babylon had no less than one
hundred gates made of solid
brass; that its walls were two
hundred feet high, and fifty
broad, according to the lowest
account given of them by
historians, and, according to
some, three hundred and fifty
feet in height, and eighty-seven
in thickness, so that six
chariots could go abreast upon
them; that it was defended by
the river Euphrates, and
supplied with provisions for
many years; it might well be
deemed impregnable: and “such a
city as this might, with less
vanity than any other, boast
that she should continue for
ever, if any thing human could
continue for ever.” — Bishop
Newton. Thou didst not lay these
things to thy heart — Thy cruel
usage of my people, and the
heavy judgments which thou hadst
reason to expect for them.
Neither didst thou remember the
latter end — Thou wast so puffed
up with pride, and so infatuated
with ease and pleasure, that
thou didst not consider the
instability of all worldly power
and greatness, and what might
and was likely to befall thee
afterward. Therefore hear, thou
that dwellest carelessly — And
layest nothing to heart; that
sayest, I am, and none else
beside me — I am independent,
self-sufficient, and
unchangeable, and there is none,
no people, state, or kingdom,
that is not either subject, or
far inferior to me in power and
glory. I shall not sit as a
widow — In solitude and sorrow:
I shall not lose that wealth and
dignity to which I am wedded.
The kingdom shall never want a
monarch to espouse and protect
it, and be a husband to the
state. Neither shall I know the
loss of children — The
diminution of the number of my
people. I shall never want
either a king or people to
defend me from all dangers.
Verse 9
Isaiah 47:9. These two things
shall come to thee — The very
two things that thou didst set
at defiance; loss of children
and widowhood — Both thy princes
and thy people shall be cut off,
so that thou shalt be no more a
government, and no more a
nation. They shall come in their
perfection — In the highest
degree: thy king and kingdom
shall be utterly and
irretrievably destroyed. This
prophecy was twice fulfilled;
“having been accomplished the
very night that Babylon was
taken, when the Persians slew
the king himself and a great
number of the Babylonians: it
was fulfilled a second time,
when that city was besieged by
Darius. Being determined to hold
out to the last extremity, they
took all their women, and each
man choosing one of them, whom
he liked best, out of his own
family, they strangled all the
rest, that unnecessary mouths
might not consume their
provision. By means of this
shocking expedient they
sustained a siege and all the
efforts of Darius for twenty
months, and the city was at last
taken by stratagem. As soon as
Darius made himself master of
the place, he ordered three
thousand of the principal men to
be crucified; and thus this
prophecy was signally fulfilled,
both by the hands of the
Babylonians themselves, and by
the cruelties exercised upon
them by their conquerors.” —
Bishop Newton. For the multitude
of thy sorceries — For thy
superstitious and magical
practices, which were very
frequent in Babylon, as we see
below, (Isaiah 47:12-13,) and as
has been observed before.
Hebrew, in the multitude, &c.,
or, as Dr. Waterland renders it,
“Notwithstanding the multitude
of thy sorceries, and the force
of thy enchantments;”
notwithstanding all thy
diabolical artifices, whereby
thou thinkest to foresee all
dangers, and to secure thyself
from them.
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 47:10-11. For thou hast
trusted in thy wickedness — Thou
hast thought that thy cunning
and policy would still preserve
thee; and hast said, None seeth
me — My counsels are so deeply
and craftily laid, and my
designs so secretly carried on,
that none can discover them or
prevent their execution. And
thou hast supposed that God
himself either did not regard
thee, or would not call thee to
an account for thy wicked
conduct. Thy wisdom and thy
knowledge — Thy skill in the
arts of human policy, or thy
pretended foreknowledge of
future events by astrology; hath
perverted thee — Hath misled
thee into the way of
transgression and perdition; and
thou hast said, I am, &c. — This
is repeated from Isaiah 47:8, to
signify their intolerable
arrogance and self-confidence.
Therefore shall evil come upon
thee — Which thou shalt neither
have time nor means to provide
against or to prepare for; thou
shalt not know from whence it
riseth — Or, rather, when it
shall come; Hebrew, שׁחרה, the
morning of it, the day, or time,
of its approach. With all thy
skill in astrology and
fortune-telling, thou shalt
neither be able to foresee the
evil that is coming upon thee,
nor to prevent it. This
interpretation agrees with the
history, Babylon being surprised
by Cyrus when they were in a
state of the greatest security,
as is manifest both from the
Scriptures and from other
authentic records: see Jeremiah
51:31; Daniel 5. And desolation
shall come upon thee suddenly —
As a thief in the night; which
thou shalt not know — Or, when
thou shalt not know. Thou shalt
not apprehend thy danger till it
be too late. Fair warning was
indeed given them, by this and
other prophets of the Lord, of
this desolation; but they
slighted that notice, and would
give no credit to it; and
therefore justly was it so
ordered, that they should have
no other warning of it, but that
partly through their own
security, and partly through the
swiftness and subtlety of the
enemy, when it came it should be
a perfect surprise to them.
Verses 12-15
Isaiah 47:12-15. Stand now with
thine enchantments — Persist in
these practices. Wherein thou
hast laboured from thy youth —
From the beginning of thy
kingdom. For the Chaldeans in
all ages were famous, or rather
infamous, for the study and
practice of these arts. Thou art
wearied in thy counsels — Thou
hast spent thy time and strength
in going from one to another, in
trying all manner of
experiments, and all to no
purpose. Let now the
astrologers, &c., stand up — To
succour thee, or to inquire for
thee. Behold, they shall be as
stubble — They shall have no
more power to withstand the
calamities coming upon them than
stubble has to resist the
violence of the fire. They shall
not deliver themselves from the
flame — And much less thee.
There shall not be a coal to
warm at, &c. — They shall be
totally consumed, and all the
comfort which thou didst expect
from them shall utterly vanish.
Thus shall they be unto thee —
Such comfortless and helpless
creatures, namely, thy
sorcerers, astrologers, &c.;
with whom thou hast laboured —
Upon whom thou hast spent thy
time, pains, and money; even thy
merchants — Or negotiators, as
Bishop Lowth translates סחרין,
with whom thou hast had so much
intercourse, and so many
dealings. They shall wander
every one to his quarter — Or,
as some interpret the meaning,
“They shall wander by whatsoever
ways they can to the extreme
boundaries of thy empire, to
save themselves from the general
calamity.” None shall save thee
— From thy impending ruin, but
all shall leave thee to perish
without help, and without hope.
Observe, reader, they, and only
they, are safe and happy, who,
by faith and prayer, deal with
one that will always be a
present help in time of trouble
to those that flee to him for
refuge, and trust in him. |