Verse 1
Isaiah 53:1. Who hath believed
our report? — The prophet
having, in the last three verses
of the former chapter, made a
general report concerning the
great and wonderful humiliation
and exaltation of the Messiah,
of which he intended to
discourse more largely in this
chapter, thought fit, before he
descended to particulars, to use
this preface. Who, not only of
the Gentiles, but even of the
Jews, will believe the truth of
what I have said, and must
further say? Few or none. The
generality of them will never
receive, nor believe in, such a
Messiah as this. Thus this place
is expounded by Christ himself,
John 12:38, and by St. Paul,
Romans 10:16. And this
premonition was highly
necessary, both to caution the
Jews that they should not
stumble at this stone, and to
instruct the Gentiles that they
should not be surprised nor
seduced with their example. And
to whom — Hebrew, על מי,
because, or, in behalf of whom,
namely, to deliver them from the
guilt and dominion of their
sins, and other spiritual
enemies; is the arm — That is,
the power; of the Lord revealed?
— This is only revealed, or
displayed, for the deliverance
of those who, with a lively and
divine faith; believe the
report: for the gospel is the
power of God unto salvation only
to him that believeth, Romans
1:16.
Verse 2-3
Isaiah 53:2-3. For he shall grow
up, &c. — And the reason why the
Jews will generally reject their
Messiah is, because he shall not
come into the world with secular
pomp, but he shall grow up, (or,
spring up, out of the ground,)
before him, (before the
unbelieving Jews, of whom he
spake, Isaiah 53:1, and that in
the singular number, as here,
who were witnesses of his mean
original; and therefore despised
him,) as a tender plant, (small
and inconsiderable,) and as a
root, or branch, grows out of a
dry, barren ground, whose
productions are generally poor
and contemptible. He hath no
form, &c. — His bodily presence
and condition in the world shall
be mean and despicable. And when
we see him, there is no beauty,
&c. — When we, that is, our
people, the Jewish nation, shall
look upon him, expecting to find
incomparable beauty and majesty
in his countenance and demeanour,
we shall be altogether
disappointed, and shall meet
with nothing desirable in him.
This the prophet speaks in the
persons of the carnal and
unbelieving Jews. There was a
great deal of true beauty in
him, the beauty of holiness, and
the beauty of goodness, enough
to render him the desire of all
nations; but the far greater
part of those among whom he
lived and conversed saw none of
this beauty; for it was
spiritually discerned. Observe,
reader, carnal minds see no
excellence in the Lord Jesus;
nothing that should induce them
to desire an acquaintance with,
or interest in him. Nay, he is
not only not desired, but he is
despised and rejected — As one
unworthy of the company and
conversation of all men;
despised as a mean man, rejected
as a bad man, a deceiver of the
people, an impostor, a
blasphemer, an associate of
Satan. He was the stone which
the builders refused; they would
not have him to reign over them.
A man of sorrows — Whose whole
life was filled with, and, in a
manner, made up of, a succession
of sorrows and sufferings; and
acquainted with grief — Who had
constant experience of, and
familiar converse with, grievous
afflictions. And we hid, &c. —
We scorned to look upon him; or
we looked another way, and his
sufferings were nothing to us;
though never sorrow was like
unto his sorrows.
Verse 4-5
Isaiah 53:4-5. Surely he hath
borne our griefs — Whereas it
may seem an incredible thing,
that so excellent and glorious,
and so innocent and holy a
person should meet with this
usage, it must be known that his
griefs and miseries were not
laid upon him for his own sake,
but wholly for the sake of
sinful men, in whose stead he
stood, and for whose sins he
suffered: yet we did esteem him
— Yet our people, the Jews, were
so far from giving him the glory
and praise of such astonishing
condescension and compassion,
that they made a most perverse
construction of it; and so great
was their prejudice against him,
that they believed he was thus
disgraced and punished, and, at
last, put to death, by the just
judgment of God, for his
blasphemy and other manifold
acts of wickedness. But, &c. —
This was a most false and
unrighteous sentence. He was
wounded —
Which word comprehends all his
pains and punishments, and his
death among the rest; for our
transgressions — The prophet
does not say by, but for them,
or, because of them, namely, for
the guilt of our sins, which he
had voluntarily taken upon
himself, and for the expiation
of our sins, which was hereby
purchased. The chastisement of
our peace — Those punishments by
which our peace, our
reconciliation to God, was to be
purchased, were laid upon him,
by God’s justice, with his own
consent. With his stripes we are
healed — By his sufferings we
are saved from our sins, and
from the dreadful effects
thereof.
Verse 6
Isaiah 53:6. All we — All
mankind; like sheep — Which are
exceedingly apt to go astray,
and lose themselves; have gone
astray — From God, and from the
way of truth and duty; of
wisdom, piety, and virtue; of
holiness and happiness. We have
turned every one to his own way
— In general, to the way of sin,
which may well be called a man’s
own way, because sin is natural
to us, inherent in us, born with
us; and, in particular, to those
several paths which several men
choose, according to their
different opinions and
circumstances. And the Lord hath
laid — Hebrew, hath made to meet
on him, as all the rivers meet
in the sea. The iniquity of us
all —
Not properly, for he knew no
sin; but the punishment of
iniquity, as the word עוןis
frequently used. That which was
due for all the sins of all
mankind, which must needs be so
heavy a load, that if he had not
been God as well as man he must
have sunk under the burden.
Verse 7
Isaiah 53:7. He was oppressed —
By the intolerable weight of his
sufferings, and he was afflicted
— By the most pungent pain and
sorrow. Or, as the Hebrew נגשׁ
הוא נענה, is rendered by Bishop
Lowth and others, It was
exacted, and he answered, or,
was made answerable. God’s
justice required satisfaction
from us for our sins, which,
alas! we were incapable of
making, and he answered the
demand; that is, became our
surety, or undertook to pay our
debt, or suffer the penalty of
the law in our stead. Yet he
opened not his mouth — He
neither murmured against God for
giving him up to suffer for
other men’s sins, nor reviled
men for punishing him without
cause, nor used apologies or
endeavours to save his own life;
but willingly and quietly
accepted the punishment of our
iniquity, manifesting, through
the whole scene of his
unparalleled sufferings, the
most exemplary patience and
meekness, and the most ready and
cheerful compliance with his
heavenly Father’s will.
Verse 8
Isaiah 53:8. He was taken from
prison and from judgment — As we
do not find that imprisonment
was any part of Christ’s
sufferings, the marginal reading
seems to be preferable here. He
was taken away by distress and
judgment; that is, he was taken
out of this life by oppression,
violence, and a pretence of
justice: or, as Bishop Lowth has
it, By an oppressive judgment he
was taken off. In Acts 8:33,
where we find this passage
quoted, the reading of the LXX.
is followed exactly, εν τη
ταπεινωσει η κρισις αυτου πρθη,
In his humiliation his judgment
was taken away; that is, in his
state of humiliation he had no
justice shown him; to take away
a person’s judgment, being a
proverbial phrase for oppressing
him. Or, as Dr. Doddridge
explains it, “Jesus appeared in
so humble a form, that, though
Pilate was convinced of his
innocence, he seemed a person of
so little importance that it
would not be worth while to
hazard any thing to preserve
him.” They who prefer the
translation given in our text,
as Beza and many other
commentators do, think the words
refer to Christ’s being taken,
by his resurrection, from his
confinement in the grave, (which
they suppose to be here called a
prison, as it is termed a house,
Job 30:23, and a pit, Psalms
69:15,) and from the judgment,
or sentence, which had been
executed upon him: “agreeable to
which Mr. L’Enfant renders it,
His condemnation was taken away
by his very abasement; that is,
his stooping to death gave
occasion to his triumph.” And
who shall declare his generation
— “This is one of the many
passages of the Old Testament
prophecies,” says Dr. Doddridge,
“in which it is not so difficult
to find a sense fairly
applicable to Christ, as to know
which to prefer of several that
are so. Many ancient, as well as
modern writers, have referred it
to the mystery of his Deity,”
his eternal generation, “or his
incarnation,” his miraculous
conception. “But Calvin and Beza
say, this was owing to their
ignorance of the Hebrew, the
word דורnot admitting such a
sense; and it is certain it very
ill suits the connection with
the following clause.” Some
understand it as referring to
his not having any witnesses to
appear for him and give an
account of his life and
character. This interpretation
is preferred by Bishop Lowth,
who therefore renders the
clause, And his manner of life
who would declare? Others again,
among whom are Calvin and Beza,
think it is as if the prophet
had said, “Who can declare how
long he shall live and reign, or
count the numerous offspring
that shall descend from him?”
But, “not to say that this idea
is much more clearly expressed
by the prophet, Isaiah 53:10,
which, on this interpretation,
is a tautology,” it does not
appear that דור, generation, and
זרע, seed, are ever used as
synonymous terms. The former of
these words, in the Hebrew,
signifies the same with a
generation of men, in English,
who are contemporaries; (see
Genesis 7:1; 2:10; Psalms 95:10;
Psalms 109:13;) and γενεα, in
the LXX., by which it is here
rendered, has most frequently
this sense. “Therefore, I
suppose,” says Dr. Doddridge,
“with Dr. Hammond, the sense to
be, ‘Who can describe the
obstinate infidelity and
barbarous injustice of that
generation of men, among whom he
appeared, and from whom he
suffered such things?’” For he
was cut off — Namely, by a
violent death; out of the land
of the living — By the wicked
hands of those whom he came to
save: see Acts 2:23. For the
transgression — Or, as some
render, מפשׁע עמי, By the
transgression of my people was
he stricken — Hebrew, נגע למו,
the stroke was on him; that is,
he was stricken, was crucified
and slain, by or through the
wickedness of the Jews. The
former, however, is doubtless
the sense intended, for, as the
angel testified to Daniel,
(Daniel 9:24; Daniel 9:26,) the
Messiah was to be cut off, not
for himself, but for the sins
and salvation of mankind. And
this, though asserted Isaiah
53:4-6, is here repeated as a
doctrine that cannot be too
frequently inculcated, or too
much regarded; and to prevent
men’s mistakes about, or
stumbling at, the humiliation of
Christ, as though he had
suffered and died for his own
sins.
Verse 9
Isaiah 53:9. And he made his
grave with the wicked — And
although he did not die for his
own sins, but only for those of
mankind, yet he was willing to
die like a malefactor, or like a
sinner, as all other men are,
and to be put into a grave as
they use to be; which was a
further degree of his
humiliation. He saith, he made
his grave, because this was
Christ’s own act, and he
willingly yielded up himself to
death and burial. And that which
follows, with the wicked, does
not denote the sameness of
place, as if he should be buried
in the same grave with other
malefactors, but the sameness of
condition. But the words may be
rendered, A grave was appointed
for him with the wicked; but he
was with the rich at his death.
Or, as Bishop Lowth reads it,
His grave was appointed with the
wicked; but with the rich man
was his tomb. See his notes. “As
our Lord was crucified between
two thieves, it was doubtless
intended he should be buried
with them. ‘Thus his grave was
appointed with the wicked;’ but
Joseph of Arimathea came and
asked for his body, and Pilate,
convinced that he had committed
no crime, readily granted
Joseph’s request. Thus ‘he was
with the rich at his death,’
that is, till his resurrection:
and this took place contrary to
the intention of his enemies,
because he had done no violence,
&c., for otherwise Joseph would
scarcely have requested Pilate,
and probably Pilate would not
have consented, to deliver up
the body of a crucified
malefactor.” — Scott. But this
latter clause may be connected
with the following verse, and
rendered, Although he had done
no violence, &c., yet it pleased
the Lord, &c. In this light it
is considered by Bishop Lowth
and many others.
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 53:10-11. It pleased the
Lord to bruise him — Although he
was perfectly innocent, it
pleased God, for other just and
wise reasons, to expose him to
sufferings and death. He hath
put him to grief — His God and
Father spared him not, though he
was his only and beloved Son,
but delivered him up for us all,
to ignominy and torture,
delivered him by his determinate
counsel and foreknowledge, (Acts
2:23,) into the power of those
whose wicked hands he knew would
execute upon him every species
of cruelty and barbarity. When
thou shalt make his soul an
offering for sin — When thou, O
God, shalt have made thy Son a
sacrifice, by giving him up to
death for the atonement of men’s
sins. His soul is here put for
his life, or for himself, or his
whole human nature, which was
sacrificed, his soul being
oppressed with a sense of the
wrath of God due to our sins,
his body crucified, and his soul
and body separated by death. Or,
the words, נפשׁו אם תשׁים אשׁם,
may be rendered, when, or, if
his soul shall make an offering
for sin, or, a propitiatory
sacrifice: whereby it may be
implied, that he did not lay
down his life by compulsion, but
willingly. He shall see his seed
— His death shall be glorious to
himself and highly beneficial to
others, for he shall have a
numerous seed of believers,
reconciled to God, and saved by
his death. He shall prolong his
days — He shall be raised to
immortal life, and live and
reign with God for ever. The
pleasure of the Lord shall
prosper in his hand — God’s
gracious decree, for the
salvation of mankind, shall be
effectually carried on by his
ministry and mediation. He shall
see of the travail of his soul —
He shall enjoy the comfortable
and blessed fruit of all his
hard labours and grievous
sufferings: and shall be
satisfied — He shall esteem his
own and his Father’s glory, and
the salvation of his people, an
abundant recompense. By his
knowledge — By the knowledge of,
or an acquaintance with himself,
that knowledge which is
accompanied with faith, love,
and obedience to him; shall my
righteous servant justify many —
Shall acquit them that believe
in and obey him from the guilt
of all their sins, and save them
from the dreadful consequences
thereof. Justification is here,
as in most other places of the
Scriptures, one or two excepted
opposed to condemnation: and
Christ is said to justify
sinners, because he does it
meritoriously, procuring
justification for us by his
sacrifice; as God the Father is
commonly said to justify
authoritatively, because he
accepted the price paid by
Christ for that blessing, and
the pronouncing of the sentence
of absolution is referred to him
in the gospel dispensation. For
he shall bear their iniquities —
For he shall satisfy the justice
and law of God for them, by
bearing the punishment due to
their sins; and therefore, on
the principles of reason and
justice, they must be acquitted,
otherwise the same debt would be
twice required and paid.
Verse 12
Isaiah 53:12. Therefore will I —
Namely, God the Father; divide
him a portion — This word
portion (though there is nothing
for it in the Hebrew)
is properly supplied out of the
next clause, where a word, which
answers to it, rendered the
spoil, is expressed; with the
great — Or, among the great —
such as the great and mighty
potentates of the world use to
have after a short combat and a
glorious victory. Though he be a
very mean and obscure person, as
to his outward condition in the
world, yet he shall attain to a
greater pitch of glory than the
greatest monarchs enjoy. He
shall divide the spoil with the
strong — The same thing repeated
in other words. The sense of
both clauses is, I will give him
great and happy success in his
undertaking: he shall conquer
all his enemies, and lead
captivity captive; and he shall
set up and establish his kingdom
among and over all the kingdoms
of the world: see Ephesians
1:20, &c.; and Philippians
2:8-9. Because he hath poured
out his soul unto death —
Because he willingly laid down
his life in obedience to God’s
command, and in order to the
redemption of mankind. And he
was numbered with the
transgressors — He was willing,
for God’s glory, and for man’s
salvation, to be reproached and
punished, like a malefactor, in
the same manner and place with
them, and between two of them,
Mark 15:27-28. And made
intercession for the
transgressors — He prayed upon
earth for all sinners, and
particularly for those that
crucified him, and in heaven he
still intercedes for them, by a
legal demand of those good
things which he purchased by the
sacrifice of himself, which,
though past, he continually
represents to his Father as if
it were present. |