Verse 1-2
Isaiah 57:1-2. These two verses
“contain a kind of prelude to
the distressful scene which is
opened immediately after: for
the prophet, designing to
describe the melancholy state of
the adulterous church, to be
chastised by the severe
judgments of God, beholds, as it
were in an ecstasy, the few
pious and good men yet remaining
in the church gradually falling
off, and taken away, either by
an immature or violent death:
while there were but few who
laid this matter to heart, and
observed it as a presage of the
judgment threatening the church.
This stupidity he sadly
deplores; immediately
subjoining, however: an
alleviation, to show that this
complaint pertained not to the
deceased, as having attained a
happier lot, and as blessed in
this respect, that they were
taken away from the evils and
calamities of their times.” —
Vitringa. The following short
paraphrase on the words will
render their sense more
apparent. The righteous
perisheth — Just and holy men,
who are the pillars of the place
and state in which they live.
And no man layeth it to heart —
Few or none of the people are
duly affected with this severe
stroke and sign of God’s
displeasure. Thus he shows that
the corruption was general in
the people no less than in the
priests. And merciful men —
Hebrew, אנשׁי חסד, men of
benignity, or beneficence, the
same whom he before called
righteous: those whose practice
it was, not only to exercise
piety and justice, but also
mercy and kindness; none
considering — None reflecting
within himself, and laying it to
heart; that the righteous is
taken away from the evil — That
dreadful calamities are coming
on the church and nation, and
that the righteous are taken
away before they come. He shall
enter into peace — The righteous
man shall be received into rest
and safety, where he shall be
out of the reach of the
approaching miseries. They — The
merciful men; shall rest in
their beds — In their graves,
not unfitly called their beds,
or sleeping- places, death being
commonly called sleep in
Scripture; each one walking in
his uprightness — That walked,
that is, lived, in a sincere and
faithful discharge of his duties
to God and men. Vitringa thinks
“the completion of this prophecy
is to be sought in the latter
end of the ninth, and in the
following centuries; when the
papal power greatly prevailed,
and the corruption of the church
was as great as the persecutions
and troubles of the pious were
many.”
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 57:3-4. But draw near
hither, &c. — “The prophet
proceeds to exhibit the church,
totally corrupt as it was, the
good men being extinct or
dispersed; so that they who
remained of the pure seed of the
church lay hid in solitary
places, while the body of the
church appeared like a dead
carcass; not the true, but the
idolatrous church.” Thus
Vitringa, who understands this
paragraph as describing the
state of the church in the dark
ages of popery. It seems,
however, by many of the
expressions which the prophet
uses, that he is rather giving a
description of the corrupt state
of the Jewish Church, before the
destruction of Jerusalem by the
Chaldeans. Draw near hither — To
God’s tribunal, to receive your
sentence; ye sons of the
sorceress — Not by propagation,
but by imitation, those being
frequently called men’s sons
that follow their example: the
seed of the adulterer, &c. — Not
the genuine children of Abraham,
as you pretend and boast
yourselves to be; your
dispositions being far more
suitable to a spurious brood
than to Abraham’s seed. Against
whom do you sport yourselves? —
Consider who it is that you mock
and scoff at when you deride
God’s prophets, (see Isaiah
28:14; Isaiah 28:22,) and know
that it is not so much men that
you insult, as God, whose cause
they plead, and in whose name
they speak. Are ye not a seed of
falsehood — A generation of
liars, whose practices
contradict your professions, who
deal deceitfully both with God
and man?
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 57:5-6. Inflaming
yourselves with idols — Hebrew,
הנחמים, being inflamed, or
growing hot, after idols, as Dr.
Waterland renders it. Lusting
after them, and mad upon them,
as the phrase is, Jeremiah
50:38. Fervent, both in making
and in worshipping them, as was
observed Isaiah 44:12. Under
every green tree — Wherever you
see an idol erected, which was
commonly done in groves, or
under great and shady trees,
which defended the worshippers
from the heat of the sun, and
were supposed to strike them
with a kind of sacred awe and
reverence. Slaying the children
— In the way of sacrifice to
your idols, after the manner of
the barbarous heathen; in the
valleys — Or, beside the brooks
which run in the valleys; which
was most commodious for such
bloody work. He seems to allude
to the valley of Hinnom, in
which these cruelties were
practised, Jeremiah 7:31. Under
the clefts of the rocks — Which
they choose for shade, or those
dark vaults in rocks, which were
convenient for idolatrous uses.
Among the smooth stones, &c, is
thy portion — Thou hast chosen
for thy portion those idols,
which were either made of those
smooth stones, or were
worshipped by the sides of
brooks or rivers, where such
smooth stones commonly lie. They
are thy lot — Thou hast forsaken
me, and chosen idols. Thou hast
offered a meat-offering — For
the devil is God’s ape, and
idolaters use the same rites and
offerings in the worship of
idols, which God prescribed in
his own worship. Should I
receive comfort in these —
Should I be pleased with such a
people, and with such actions?
“The Jews were extremely
addicted to the practice of many
superstitious and idolatrous
rites, which the prophet here
inveighs against. Of the worship
of huge stones consecrated,
there are many testimonies of
the ancients. They were called
βαιτυλοι and βαιτυλια, probably
from the stone which Jacob
erected at Beth-el, pouring oil
upon the top of it. The practice
was very common in different
ages and places.” — Bishop
Lowth, who mentions divers
instances of this foolish
superstition.
Verse 7-8
Isaiah 57:7-8. Upon a lofty and
high mountain — In high places,
which were much used for
religious worship, both by the
Israelites and heathen: hast
thou set thy bed — Thine altar,
as appears from the sacrifice
mentioned in the next clause,
where thou didst commit
spiritual whoredom with idols.
Behind the doors also and the
posts — Behind the posts of the
doors of thy house; hast thou
set up thy remembrance — That
is, the images of their tutelary
gods, or some monuments or
tokens, placed there as
memorials of them, in direct
opposition to the law of God,
which commanded them to write
upon the door-posts of their
houses, and upon their gates,
the words of his law,
Deuteronomy 6:9; Deuteronomy
11:20. If they chose for them
such a situation as more
private, it was in defiance of a
particular curse denounced in
the law against the man who
should make a graven or a molten
image, and put it in a secret
place, Deuteronomy 27:15. For
thou hast discovered thyself,
&c. — “The prophet describes
their idolatry under the
metaphor of a woman’s being
false to her husband’s bed,
Isaiah 57:3. So he tells them
that they had committed
spiritual adultery, when they
went up to the high places to
sacrifice, Isaiah 57:7. That
they had multiplied their
idolatries, as an unchaste woman
does her lovers; that they had
broken their covenant with God,
whom they had acknowledged to be
their lord and husband, and made
a new contract with idols to
serve them.” — Lowth. Thou
lovedst their bed where thou
sawest it — No sooner didst thou
see the heathen idols, but thou
wast enamoured with them, and
didst fall down and worship
them, like a lewd woman, who is
inflamed with lust toward almost
every man she sees.
Verse 9
Isaiah 57:9. Thou wentest to the
king, &c. — That is, the king of
Assyria or Egypt, to whom the
Israelites were very prone to
seek, and trust, and send
presents. Hosea reproaches the
Israelites for the same
practice: They make a covenant
with Assyria, and oil is carried
into Egypt, Hosea 12:1. Thus the
prophet passes from their
idolatry to another sin, even to
their carnal confidence in
heathen princes, for which they
are often severely reproved.
These two sins indeed were
commonly joined together; for
they easily received idolatry
from those kings whose help they
desired. With ointment — With
precious ointment, particularly
with balm, which was of great
price, was a commodity peculiar
to those parts, and sometimes
sent as a present, Genesis
13:11. And didst increase thy
perfumes — Didst send great
quantities thereof to them, to
procure their aid. Didst send
thy messengers far off — Into
Assyria, which was far from
Judea, or into Egypt. And didst
debase thyself, &c. — Thou wast
willing to submit to the basest
terms to procure their aid. “It
is well known, that in all parts
of the East, whoever visits a
great person must carry him a
present. ‘It is accounted
uncivil,’ says Maundrell, p. 26,
‘to visit in this country
without an offering in hand. All
great men expect it, as a
tribute due to their character
and authority; and look upon
themselves as affronted, and
indeed defrauded, when the
compliment is omitted.’” —
Bishop Lowth. According to the
interpretation of this part of
the prophecy, adopted by
Vitringa, the king, in this
verse, must mean the head of
mystical Babylon, the pope, to
whom indeed the particulars here
very aptly pertain, as they who
are acquainted with the history
of that antichristian ruler will
easily discern. See Revelation
18:13.
Verse 10
Isaiah 57:10. Thou art wearied
with the greatness of thy way —
Thou hast not eased, or
relieved, but only tired thyself
with all thy tedious journeys
and laborious endeavours. Yet
sayest thou not, There is no
hope — And yet thou didst not
perceive that thy labour was
lost, and that thy case was not
mended, but made more desperate
by these practices. Thou hast
found the life of thy hand —
Thou hast sometimes found
success in these ways; or, thou
falsely supposest that thy hand
is strengthened thereby.
Therefore thou wast not grieved
— Therefore thou didst not
repent of thy sin and folly
herein, but didst persist and
applaud thyself in such courses.
Verses 11-14
Isaiah 57:11-14. Of whom hast
thou been afraid, &c. — And
what, or who are they, the fear
of whom drives thee to these
wicked and desperate practices?
Are they not weak and mortal
creatures, such as wholly depend
upon me, and can do nothing
without me? The fear of my
displeasure ought, in all
reason, to outweigh all thy
other fears and apprehensions,
and deter thee from breaking
that covenant whereby thou art
engaged to me. That thou hast
lied — That thou hast dealt thus
perfidiously with me, and sought
for such foreign assistances
contrary to my command. And hast
not remembered me — Hast
forgotten all those great things
which I have done for thee, and
all those promises which I have
made to thee. Nor laid it to thy
heart — Or, nor set me upon thy
heart: hast not seriously and
affectionately considered what I
am, how all-sufficient,
faithful, and gracious: for then
thou wouldest not have
distrusted or disobeyed me. Have
I not held my peace, &c. — The
Bishops’ Bible, published under
Queen Elizabeth, translates the
clause thus: Is it not because I
held my peace, and that of a
long time, therefore thou
fearest me not? Sinners take
encouragement to continue in
sin, from God’s patience and
long-suffering. I will declare
thy righteousness — I will no
longer be silent, but “will show
thee thy deserts, and give thee
a view of thy deeds, which then
will appear quite of another
sort than what thy own
self-conceit makes thee believe
them to be.” For they shall not
profit thee — These actions
shall be of no real advantage,
but quite the contrary. When
those criest — Namely, unto me
for deliverance; let thy
companies deliver thee — Expect
it, not from me, whom thou hast
forsaken and despised, but from
those foreign troops, to which
thou hast sought and trusted for
succour. But the wind shall
carry them all away — They shall
be so far from saving thee, that
they shall not be able to
deliver themselves; but shall be
carried away suddenly and
violently by the blast of mine
anger. Vanity shall take them —
Their endeavours to help thee
shall be vain and fruitless. But
he that putteth his trust in me
— Those that still depend upon
me, and make use of none of
those indirect means to preserve
themselves; shall possess the
land —
Shall be preserved in, or
restored to, their own land, or
shall have temporal blessings as
far as will be good for them;
and shall inherit my holy
mountain — Shall enjoy my favour
and presence in my temple: shall
be blessed with the privileges
of the church on earth, and
brought at length to the joys of
heaven. And shall say — Hebrew,
and he shall say: or, and one
shall say: God shall raise up
one who shall say, with
authority and efficacy, Cast ye
up, &c. — Make causeways, where
it is needful, for the safe and
easy passage of my people, and
remove all things which may
hinder them in their return.
Verse 15-16
Isaiah 57:15-16. For thus saith
the high and lofty One — The
omnipotent and supreme Ruler of
the universe; that inhabiteth
eternity — Who is from
everlasting to everlasting,
without beginning of days, or
end of life, or change of time;
who only hath immortality, hath
it of himself, and that
constantly; who inhabits it, and
cannot be dispossessed of it;
whose name is Holy — Who is
perfectly and essentially holy
in his nature, his works, his
words, and his ways; and
therefore both can and will
deliver his church and people,
as he has promised to do. I
dwell in the high and holy
place; with him also, &c. —
Although my throne is in the
highest heavens, where nothing
impure can have place, yet I do
not disdain graciously to visit,
and familiarly converse with,
those sinners of mankind, whose
spirits are broken by
affliction, and humbled under a
sense of their sins, for which
they were afflicted; which
doubtless was the case with many
of the Jews in the Babylonish
captivity: whom, therefore, he
here implies, that God would
pity and deliver out of their
distresses, as also all others
in similar circumstances. To
revive the spirit of the humble
— To support and comfort them
amidst their afflictions and
troubles, of whatever kind. For
I will not contend for ever — I
will not proceed to the utmost
severity with sinful men. For
the spirit should fail before me
— For then their spirits would
sink and die under my stroke,
and I should do nothing else but
destroy the work of my own
hands: therefore I consider
their infirmity, and spare them.
See Psalms 78:38-39; and Psalms
103:9-14; which passages Bishop
Lowth thinks contain the best
and easiest explication of this
clause.
Verse 17
Isaiah 57:17. For the iniquity
of his covetousness — The
covetousness of the Jewish
people, (here addressed as one
man,) who were eminently guilty
of this sin before the
Babylonish captivity, as is
expressly affirmed, Jeremiah
6:13; and Jeremiah 8:10; and
they were still more addicted to
it in the time of Christ, and
previous to the destruction of
their city by the Romans; Christ
himself testifying, that the
greatest professors of sanctity
among them devoured widows’
houses, and, for a pretence,
made long prayers. But this sin
is not mentioned exclusively of
others, but so as to comprehend
all those sins for which God was
wroth, and smote them:
covetousness, however, joined
with a froward going on in the
way of their own hearts, has
been the characteristic sin of
that people, in all ages, since
the overturning of their
commonwealth by the Romans. If
Vitringa’s exposition of this
chapter be adopted, this verse
must be understood of the
avarice of the Church of Rome,
manifested by her enormous
exactions, and her infamous
traffic in indulgences,
dispensations, and a variety of
equally abominable practices,
which, for many ages, have
disgraced that church in the
view of all intelligent and
pious Christians. I hid me, and
was wroth —
I withdrew my favour and help
from him, and left him in great
calamities. And he went on
frowardly — Yet he was not
reformed by corrections, but in
his distresses trespassed more
and more, and obstinately
persisted in those sinful
courses which were most pleasing
to the lusts of his own corrupt
heart.
Verse 18
Isaiah 57:18. I have seen his
ways — I have taken notice of
those evil ways in which he
seems resolved to walk, and that
he is neither reformed by
mercies nor judgments; and will
heal him — Or rather, yet I will
heal him: although I might
justly destroy him, and leave
him to perish in his own ways,
yet, of my mere mercy, and for
my own name’s sake, I will pity
this people, turn them from
their sins, and bring them out
of their troubles. Which promise
was partly fulfilled when God
restored them from Babylon, and
will be more perfectly and
evidently accomplished, when he
shall convert them to the
Christian faith in the latter
days. And restore comforts unto
him — Comforts as great as his
troubles had been; and — Or
rather, to wit; to his mourners
— To those who are humbled under
God’s hand, and that mourn in
Zion for their own and other
people’s sins, Isaiah 61:2-3;
and Ezekiel 9:4; and for the
calamities of God’s church and
people, Isaiah 66:10. The
mourners here spoken of,
Vitringa thinks, mean those true
penitents, who lamented the
scandals and offences of
professing Christians in their
times, under whom they
grievously suffered, such as the
Waldenses, the Lollards, and
others who, by the mercy of God,
were rescued from the errors and
corruptions of the fallen
church, when the light of the
Reformation began to dawn.
Verses 19-21
Isaiah 57:19-21. I create — I
will, by my almighty power, in a
wonderful manner produce; the
fruit of the lips — Praise and
thanksgiving, termed the fruit
of the lips, Hosea 14:2; Hebrews
13:15. God creates this fruit of
the lips, by giving new subjects
and causes of thanksgiving, by
his mercies conferred on those
among his people, who
acknowledge and bewail their
transgressions, and return to
him. Peace, peace, &c. — Here we
have the great subject of
thanksgiving, reconciliation
with God, pardon and peace
offered to them that are nigh,
and to them that are afar off;
not only to the Jew, but also to
the Gentile, as St. Paul more
than once applies those terms,
Ephesians 2:13; Ephesians 2:17.
See also Acts 2:39. The doubling
of the word signifies the
certainty and excellence of this
peace. But though this peace be
freely offered to all without
exception, yet all will not
partake of it, for the wicked
are like the troubled sea, &c. —
Their minds are restless, being
perpetually hurried with their
own lusts and passions, and with
guilt, and the dread of divine
vengeance. There is no peace to
the wicked — Though they may
have as great a share of outward
prosperity as the best men have,
yet they have no share in this
inward, spiritual, and
everlasting peace. The
forty-eighth chapter ends with
the same declaration; to express
the exclusion of the impenitent
and unbelieving from the benefit
of the foregoing promises. |