Verse 1-2
Isaiah 51:1-2. Hearken unto me,
&c. — Here again he addresses
his discourse to the believing
and godly Jews, whom he
describes as following after
righteousness — That is,
earnestly desiring and
diligently pursuing the
justification of their persons,
the sanctification of their
nature, and practical obedience
to God’s law; for which
blessings they sought the Lord —
That is, sought an acquaintance
and reconciliation with him, the
manifestation of his favour, and
the communication of his Spirit.
These, his true people, he
exhorts to look unto the rock
whence they were hewn, &c. — To
consider the state of Abraham
and Sarah before God gave them
Isaac, from whom Jacob and all
his posterity sprang. He
compares the bodies of Abraham
and Sarah unto a rock, or pit,
or quarry, out of which stones
are hewn or dug; thereby
implying, that God, in some
sort, actually did that which
John the Baptist said he was
able to do, (Matthew 3:9,) even
of stones to raise up children
unto Abraham; it being then as
impossible, by the course of
nature, for Abraham and Sarah,
in such an advanced age as they
then were, to have a child, as
it is to hew one out of a rock,
or dig one out of a pit. For I
called him alone — Hebrew, אחד,
one; that is, when he was but
one single person, without child
or family, I called him from his
country and kindred to follow me
to an unknown land, where I
promised that I would multiply
him exceedingly. And I blessed
him, and increased him — Namely,
into a vast multitude, when his
condition was desperate in the
eye of reason. And therefore God
can as easily deliver and raise
his church when they are in the
most forlorn condition, and seem
to be consumed, dead, and
buried, so that nothing but dry
bones remain of them, as is
declared at large, Ezekiel chap.
37.
Verse 3
Isaiah 51:3. For, &c. — The
prophet, in these words, seems
to be giving a reason why they
should look unto, or consider,
that famous example of Abraham
and Sarah; namely, because they
should find the like wonder
wrought on their behalf. Or the
meaning may be, therefore, for
the sake of Abraham and of that
covenant which God made with
him, and by which he promised to
bless him and his seed for ever;
the Lord shall comfort Zion —
His church, frequently, as we
have seen, called by that name.
He will make her wilderness like
Eden — Although she may be waste
and desolate like a wilderness
or desert for a time, yet she
shall be restored and made as
pleasant and flourishing as the
garden of Eden was. The
expressions are figurative, and,
according to Vitringa, “in their
primary sense, refer to the
state of Zion after their
restoration from Babylon; in
their secondary and spiritual
sense, to the redemption of the
church by the Messiah, and the
consequent blessings of grace.”
See Isaiah 49:19; Isaiah 52:9.
Verse 4-5
Isaiah 51:4-5. Hearken unto me,
my people — Ye Jews, whom I
chose to be my peculiar people,
do not reject my counsel, which,
I have told you, even the
Gentiles will receive, nor
forsake the mercies of which
even they will partake. For a
law shall proceed from me — A
new law, even the doctrine of
the gospel. I will make my
judgment to rest for a light —
Judgment is here the same thing
with law in the former clause,
the word of God, or the
evangelical doctrine, of which
he saith, that he will make it
to rest, that is, settle and
establish it; whereby he may
possibly intimate the stability
and perpetuity of this light in
the church, that it shall not be
like the light of the Mosaic
dispensation, which was only to
shine for a season, namely,
until the time of reformation,
(Hebrews 9:10,) when all those
dark shadows were to vanish and
give place to the Sun of
righteousness, and to that
kingdom and state that should
never be moved. See Daniel 2:44;
Hebrews 12:26-28. Of the people
— Hebrew, עמים, the peoples, not
only you Jews, but people of all
sorts and nations, who shall
receive and walk in it. My
righteousness is near — My
salvation, the redemption of all
my people, Jews and Gentiles,
which is the effect of my
righteousness, of my justice,
faithfulness, or mercy, which
are all called by the name of
righteousness in the Scriptures,
and all contributed to the work
of man’s redemption. My
salvation is gone forth — Shall
shortly go forth; my eternal
purpose of saving my people
shall speedily be fulfilled; and
mine arm, my power, shall judge
the people — Either, 1st, Shall
destroy those who obstruct or
oppose this work: or, rather,
2d, Shall subdue the Gentiles to
my authority, and rule them by
my Word and Spirit. The isles —
The remote countries of the
Gentiles; shall wait upon me —
Shall expect this salvation from
me, and from me only.
Verse 6
Isaiah 51:6. Lift up your eyes
to the heavens — Look up to the
visible heavens above, which
have continued hitherto, and
seem likely to continue; and
look upon the earth beneath —
Which seems as firmly
established as if it would
endure for ever. The heavens
shall vanish away like smoke —
Which soon spends itself and
disappears; and the earth shall
wax old, &c. — Shall decay and
perish, like a worn-out garment.
And they that dwell therein
shall die in like manner — Shall
be dissolved, as the heaven and
earth shall be, 2 Peter 3:11.
But my salvation shall be for
ever, &c. — As it shall spread
through all the nations of the
earth, so it shall last through
all the ages of the world, and,
in its consequences, to all
eternity.
Verse 7-8
Isaiah 51:7-8. Hearken, ye that
know righteousness — Who not
only understand, but love and
practise it; whose persons are
justified, whose nature is
renewed, and whose lives are
subject to my laws. These seem
to be distinguished from those
who are spoken of (Isaiah 51:1)
as following after
righteousness. These had
attained what the others were
only in pursuit of. The people
in whose heart is my law — Who
are here opposed to the carnal
Jews, that had the law written
only on tables of stone. Compare
2 Corinthians 3:3; Hebrews 8:10.
Fear ye not the reproach of men
— The censures of your carnal
countrymen, who load their
believing and godly brethren
with a world of reproaches; but
let not these things discourage
you: for the moth shall eat them
up, &c. — Those that reproach
you shall be easily and soon
destroyed, and so God will
avenge your cause upon them, and
deliver you from their injurious
treatment; and the worm shall
eat them like wool — Like a
woollen garment, which is sooner
corrupted by moths, or such
creatures, than linen.
Verses 9-11
Isaiah 51:9-11. Awake, awake,
&c. — The prophet, by an elegant
figure, addresses himself to
God, to stir up and exert his
power in behalf of his oppressed
people, as he did in former
times, when he delivered them
out of the Egyptian bondage.
Awake, as in the ancient days —
That is, act for us now as thou
didst for our fathers formerly:
repeat the wonders they have
told us of. Art thou not it that
cut Rahab — Egypt, so called,
here and elsewhere, for its
pride or strength. And wounded
the dragon — Pharaoh, the
Leviathan, as he is called,
Psalms 74:13-14. Art thou not it
that dried the sea — Art thou
not the same God, and as potent
now as thou wast then? That made
the depths a way for the
ransomed, &c. — For thy people,
whom thou didst redeem and bring
out of Egypt? Let thine arm be
stretched out in our behalf; for
it has done great things
formerly in defence of the same
cause, and we are sure it is
neither shortened nor weakened.
Therefore the redeemed of the
Lord shall return, &c. — These
words express the persuasion of
the prophet, that as the Lord
did these great things formerly,
so he would certainly do the
like again. See note on Isaiah
35:10.
Verse 12-13
Isaiah 51:12-13. I, even I, am
he that comforteth you — “They
prayed,” says Henry, “for the
operations of his power: he
answers them with the
consolations of his grace; which
may well be accepted as an
equivalent. I, even I, he says,
will do it: he had ordered his
ministers to do it, chap. 40:1;
but, because they cannot reach
the heart, he takes the work
into his own hands; he will do
it himself. And those whom he
comforts, are comforted indeed.”
Who art thou, that thou
shouldest be afraid, &c. — How
unreasonable and distrustful art
thou, O my church, how unlike to
thyself! How unsuitable are
these despondences to thy
professions and obligations!
Afraid of a man that shall die,
&c. — Of a weak, mortal, and
perishing creature. And
forgettest the Lord thy Maker —
Dost not consider the infinite
power of that God who made thee,
and who will plead thy cause;
that hath stretched forth the
heavens, and laid the
foundations of the earth — And
therefore hath all the hosts and
all the powers of both at his
command and disposal. And hast
feared continually every day —
Hast been in a state of
continual alarm and disquietude;
because of the fury of the
oppressor — It is true there is
an oppressor, and he is furious,
designing, it may be, to do thee
a mischief, and therefore it
will be thy wisdom to be on thy
guard against him: but thou art
afraid of him, as if he were
ready to destroy — As if it were
in his power to destroy thee in
a moment, and he were just now
going to effect his purpose, and
there were no possibility of
preventing it. And where is the
fury of the oppressor? — What is
become of the power and rage of
the Babylonians? Are they not
vanished away? Are they not
broken, and thou delivered? He
speaks of the thing as already
done, because it should
certainly and suddenly be done.
Verses 14-16
Isaiah 51:14-16. The captive
exile hasteneth that he may be
loosed — From his captivity, and
may return to his own country
from which he is banished. And
that he should not die in the
pit — Die a prisoner, through
the inconveniences and hardships
of his confinement; nor that his
bread should fail — The bread or
provision allowed to keep him
alive in prison. The general
sense of the verse is, God is
not slack, as you think, but
makes haste to fulfil his
promise, and rescue his captive
and oppressed people from all
their oppressions and miseries.
And I have put my words in thy
mouth — These great and glorious
promises, which are in thy
mouth, are not the vain words of
man, a weak, inconstant, and
unfaithful creature, but the
words of the almighty,
unchangeable, and faithful God;
and therefore they shall be
infallibly accomplished. This is
spoken by God to his church and
people, whom he addresses, both
in the foregoing and following
verses. For God’s word is
frequently said to be put into
the mouths, not only of the
prophets, but also of the
people, as Isaiah 59:21;
Deuteronomy 30:14. And have
covered thee, &c. — Have
protected thee by my almighty
power. That I may plant the
heavens — Bishop Lowth reads, To
stretch out the heavens: and lay
the foundations of the earth — I
have given thee, O my church,
these promises, and this
protection in all thy
calamities, to assure thee of my
care and kindness to thee, and
that I will reform thee in a
most glorious manner, and bring
thee unto that perfect and
blessed estate which is reserved
for the days of the Messiah,
which, in the language of
Scripture, is termed the making
of new heavens and a new earth,
Isaiah 65:17; and Isaiah 66:22.
And say unto Zion, Thou art my
people — That I may own thee for
my people, in a more illustrious
manner than I have done.
Verse 17
Isaiah 51:17. Awake, awake — God
having awoke and arisen for the
comfort of his people, here
calls on them to awake, as
afterward, Isaiah 52:1. This is
a call to awake, not so much out
of the sleep of sin though that
also was necessary, in order to
their being ready for
deliverance, as out of the
stupor of despondency and
despair. Hebrew, התעוררי, rouse
up thyself; come out of that
forlorn and disconsolate
condition in which thou hast so
long been. When the Jews were in
captivity they were so
overwhelmed with the sense of
their troubles that they had no
heart left to mind any thing
that tended to their comfort or
relief; and therefore when the
deliverance came, they are said
(Psalms 126:1) to be like them
that dream. The address may be
applied to the Jerusalem, or
Jewish Church, which was in the
apostles’ time, which is said to
be in bondage with her children,
(Galatians 4:25,) and to have
been under the power of a spirit
of slumber, Romans 11:8. They
are called to awake and mind the
things that belonged to their
everlasting peace, and then the
cup of trembling should be taken
out of their hands, peace should
be spoken to them, and they
should triumph over Satan, who
had blinded their eyes, and
brought stupor insensibly upon
them. Stand up — Upon thy feet,
O thou who hast been thrown to
the ground. Who hast drunk, &c.,
the cup of his fury — Who hast
been sorely afflicted; the dregs
of the cup of trembling — Which
strikes him that drinks it with
a deadly horror; and wrung them
out — Drunk every drop of it.
Verses 18-20
Isaiah 51:18-20. There is none
to guide her, &c. — When thou
wast drunk with this cup, and
couldest not direct or support
thy steps, neither thy princes,
nor prophets, nor priests, were
able or willing to lead or
uphold thee. These two things
are come upon thee — Those here
following, which, although they
be expressed in four words, yet
may be fitly reduced to two
things, namely, desolation by
famine, and destruction by the
sword. Who shall be sorry for
thee — Who is there left to take
pity on thee, since thy children
are all in as miserable a
condition as thyself? See Isaiah
51:18; Isaiah 51:20. By whom
shall I comfort thee — What
human means of comfort is there
left for thee?
Thy sons have fainted — They are
so far from being able to
comfort thee, as was said Isaiah
51:18, that they themselves
faint away for want of comfort,
and through famine. They lie at
the head of all the streets —
Dead by famine, or the sword of
the enemy; as a wild bull in a
net — Those of them who are not
slain are struggling for life.
They are full of the fury of the
Lord — “The bold image of the
cup of God’s wrath,” says Bishop
Lowth, “often employed by the
sacred writers, is nowhere
handled with greater force and
sublimity than in this passage.
Jerusalem is represented in
person, as staggering under the
effects of it, destitute of that
assistance which she might
expect from her children, not
one of them being able to
support or lead her. They,
abject and amazed, lie at the
head of every street,
overwhelmed with the greatness
of their distress; like the oryx
entangled in a net, in vain
struggling to rend it and
extricate himself. This is
poetry of the first order,
sublimity of the highest proof.”
Verses 21-23
Isaiah 51:21-23. Hear, thou
drunken, but not with wine — But
with the cup of God’s fury,
mentioned Isaiah 51:17. Thus
saith the Lord — That is,
Jehovah; he that is able to help
thee, and hath wherewithal to
relieve thee; thy Lord — That
hath an incontestable right to
thee, and will not alienate it;
thy God — In covenant with thee,
and that hath undertaken to make
thee happy; that pleadeth the
cause of his people — As their
patron and protector, who,
though he hath been angry with,
and hath chastised thee, is now
reconciled to thee, and will
maintain thy cause against all
thine enemies. I have taken out
of thy hand the cup of trembling
— The bitter, intoxicating cup
of my wrath; thou shalt no more
drink it again — No more lie
under such judgments after thy
prosperity in the latter days,
Isaiah 52:1. But I will put it
into the hand of them that
afflict thee — Compare Isaiah
49:26; Jeremiah 25:29;
Revelation 18:6. Which have said
to thy soul, Bow down, &c. — Lie
down upon the ground, that we
may trample upon thee. “A very
strong and most expressive
description of the insolent
pride of eastern conquerors,
which, though it may seem
greatly exaggerated, yet hardly
exceeds the strict truth. See
Joshua 10:24; 1:7. The Emperor
Valerianus, being, through
treachery, taken prisoner by
Sapor, king of Persia, was
treated by him as the basest and
most abject slave: for the
Persian monarch commanded the
unhappy Roman to bow himself
down, and offer his back, on
which he set his foot, in order
to mount his chariot or horse,
whenever he had occasion.” —
Bishop Lowth. |