Verse 1
Isaiah 65:1. That in the primary
sense of this text it is a
prophecy of the conversion of
the Gentiles, upon the rejection
of the Jews, for their contempt
and crucifying of Christ, cannot
be doubted by any, who will not
arrogate to themselves a greater
ability to interpret the
prophecies of the Old Testament
than St. Paul had, who, Romans
10:20, expressly so interprets
it, and applies it; which shows
the vanity of the Jews in their
other interpretations of it. I
am sought — Hebrew, נדרשׁתי,
literally, diligent inquiry is
made after me; or, I am
diligently inquired of. Vitringa
renders it, “Quæsitus sum cum
effectu;” I am sought so as to
be found. The LXX. read, εμφανης
εγενηθην, I am made manifest,
or, made known, as Bishop Lowth
translates it; to them that
asked not for me — That in times
past made no inquiry after me; I
am now found by them that
formerly sought me not. I said,
Behold me, behold me — I invited
whole nations, by the preaching
of my gospel, to behold me, and
that with importunity,
reiterating my calls and
entreaties; and this I did unto
a nation not called by my name,
with which I was not in
covenant, and which did not
profess any relation to me. The
prophet speaks of what was to
take place some hundreds of
years afterward, as if it were a
thing already done, to signify
the certainty of it.
Verse 2
Isaiah 65:2. I have spread out
my hands — This is applied to
the Jews, Romans 10:21. I have
stretched out my hands, I have
used all means to reduce them; I
have stretched out the hands of
a passionate orator, to persuade
them; of a liberal benefactor,
to load them with my benefits:
this I have done continually, in
the whole course of my
providence with them. To a
rebellious people — Yet they are
a rebellious people. St. Paul
expounds it by λαον απειθουντα
και αντιλεγοντα, A people not
persuaded, not believing, or,
not obeying; but gainsaying, or,
contradicting the word and will
of God. Which walketh in a way
that is not good — Less is
expressed than is intended: the
meaning is, in a way that is
very bad. After their own
thoughts — Or, as it is
elsewhere expressed, after the
imaginations of their hearts; a
usual phrase to describe sin,
especially in the matter of
God’s worship. The Prophet
Jeremiah expresses sin in this
manner many times.
Verse 3-4
Isaiah 65:3-4. A people that
provoketh me to anger — That the
Jews are the people here
intended, is without question:
the prophet, speaking of the
calling of the Gentiles, upon
their rejection, enumerates some
of their sins which were the
causes thereof: for though their
crucifying of Christ was the sin
which was the principal or
proximate cause, yet God visited
on that generation their
iniquities and the iniquities of
their fathers together; they
having, by the act of rejecting
and crucifying their Messiah,
filled up the measure of their
sins. Continually to my face —
With the utmost impudence, not
taking notice of my omnipresence
and omniscience. That
sacrificeth in gardens, and
burneth, &c. — Directly contrary
to the divine rule. “These are
instances,” says Bishop Lowth,
“of heathenish superstition, and
idolatrous practices, to which
the Jews were immoderately
addicted before the Babylonish
captivity. The heathen
worshipped their idols in
groves: whereas God, in
opposition to this species of
idolatry, commanded his people,
when they should come into the
promised land, to destroy all
the places wherein the
Canaanites had served their
gods, and in particular to burn
their groves with fire,
Deuteronomy 12:2-3. These
apostate Jews sacrificed upon
altars built of bricks; in
opposition to the command of
God, with regard to his altar,
which was to be of unhewn stone,
Exodus 20:25. Or it means
perhaps that they sacrificed
upon the roofs of their houses,
which were always flat, and
paved with brick or tile, or
plaster of terrace; an instance
of this idolatrous practice we
find 2 Kings 23:12, where it is
said that Josiah beat down the
altars that were on the top of
the upper chamber of Ahaz, which
the kings of Judah had made. See
also Zephaniah 1:5.” Who remain
among the graves, and lodge in
the monuments — Or, as Bishop
Lowth renders it, Who dwell in
the sepulchres and lodge in the
caverns, for the purposes of
necromancy, (or, the art of
revealing future events by
communications with the dead,)
and divination; to obtain dreams
and revelations: another
instance this of heathenish
superstition, which the Latin
poet describes as follows: — —
“Huc dona sacerdos Cum tulit, et
cæsarum ovium sub nocte silenti
Pellibus incubuit stratis,
somnosque petivit; Multa modis
simulacra videt volitantia
miris, Et varias audit voces,
fruiturque Deorum Colloquio,
atque imis Acheronta affatur
Avernis.” VIRG. ÆN., 7:86.
“Here in distress th’ Italian
nations come, Anxious to clear
their doubts, and learn their
doom: First, on the fleeces of
the slaughter’d sheep, By night
the sacred priest dissolves in
sleep; When, in a train, before
his slumb’ring eye, Thin airy
forms and wondrous visions fly,
He calls the powers who guard
the infernal floods, And talks
inspired, familiar with the
gods.” PITT.
Which eat swine’s flesh — “Which
was expressly forbidden by the
law, Leviticus 11:7; but among
the heathen was in principal
request in their sacrifices and
feasts. Antiochus Epiphanes
compelled the Jews to eat
swine’s flesh, as a full proof
of their renouncing their
religion, 2 Maccabees 6:18; and
2 Maccabees 7:1. And broth of
abominable things — For
lustrations, magical arts, and
other superstitious and
abominable practices.” — Bishop
Lowth.
Verse 5-6
Isaiah 65:5-6. Who say, Stand by
thyself, come not near to me —
Though they were so exceedingly
guilty, yet they pretended to
singular sanctity, so that they
would not suffer others to come
near or touch them. The reader
will observe that the crime of
hypocrisy is here decried, and
every one that is acquainted
with the gospels will easily see
that the character of the
Pharisees and their followers is
drawn in this passage; see Luke
18:10. And there cannot be a
more lively description of
spiritual pride and hypocritical
arrogance than it gives us. For
I am holier than thou — Thus
they esteemed themselves holier
than others, though all their
holiness lay in rituals, and
those too such as God never
commanded. Of these God saith,
These are a smoke in my
nostrils, a fire that burneth
all the day —
That is, a continual provocation
to me: as smoke is an offence to
our noses. Behold, it is written
before me — They may think I
take no notice of these things,
but I will as certainly remember
them as princes remember the
things which, in order that they
may not forget them, they record
in writing. And they shall know
that I take notice of, and will
remember them; for I will not
keep silence — That is, I will
not long neglect the punishment
of them, though for a while I
have delayed it, like a man who
restrains his wrath, for some
wise reasons which are best
known to himself, Psalms 50:21;
but will recompense into their
bosom — My punishment of them
shall be severe and certain, but
yet it shall be just, and not
greater than their sins have
merited.
Verse 7
Isaiah 65:7. Your iniquities,
and the iniquities of your
fathers together — Yea, and when
I reckon with them, I will
punish them, not only for their
personal sins, but for the sins
of their parents, which they
have made their own, by
imitation. Which have burned
incense upon the mountains —
There performing to idols that
homage which I commanded them to
pay unto me; or, if any of them
pretend it was to me they
performed that service, though
before an image, yet it was in a
way and place in which I
expressly forbid them to worship
me, having appointed the place
where, and the manner how, I
would be worshipped. And
blasphemed me upon the hills —
Dishonoured instead of
glorifying me, by worshipping me
in a way which I had not
appointed, and which they
learned only from idolaters.
Therefore will I measure their
former work, &c. — I will not
only punish the late sins that
they have committed, but the
former sins of this kind, which
those that went before did
practise, and they have
continued in.
Verses 8-10
Isaiah 65:8-10. Thus saith the
Lord — These words may be
conceived as a gracious answer
from God to the prophet,
pleading God’s covenant with
Abraham, Isaac, and Israel. To
this God replies, that he
intended no such severity as the
utter destruction of the whole
nation; that the unfaithfulness
of men should not make his
promise to the ancient
patriarchs of none effect,
Romans 3:3; that his threatening
should be made good upon the
generality of this people, whose
vine was of Sodom, and of the
fields of Gomorrah, Deuteronomy
32:32. As the new wine is found
in the cluster, &c. — As in a
vineyard, which is generally
unfruitful, there may be some
vine that brings forth fruit; or
as in a vine that is full of
luxuriant branches, that bring
forth no fruit, there may be
here and there a bunch that
contains good grapes, and as to
such, the gardener bids his
servants destroy it not, for
there is in them what speaks
God’s blessing. So — So
(saith God) will I do for my
servants’ sake, that I may not
destroy them all — Namely, for
the sake of my servants,
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. I
will bring a seed out of Jacob —
A small number, which shall be
as a seed, from whence others
shall spring, Romans 9:27-29.
And out of Judah — God further
promises to bring out of Judah
an inheritor of his mountains —
That is, of the country of
Judea, which was mountainous.
God calls them his mountains,
because he had chosen that
country before all others.
Though this may first refer to
the return of the Jews out of
the captivity of Babylon into
their own land, yet, according
to this whole prophecy, it must
ultimately respect their
restoration to the land of
Canaan, after their conversion
to Christianity. And mine elect
shall inherit it — My chosen
ones, namely, such as should
embrace Christianity, termed by
St. Paul, the election of grace,
(Romans 11:5-7,) who, in
consequence of repentance toward
God, and faith in Jesus of
Nazareth as the true Messiah,
should become, with the Gentile
Christians, a chosen generation,
a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, a peculiar people, to
offer spiritual sacrifices,
acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ. And Sharon shall be a
fold of flocks — After they are
restored, as mentioned above, to
their own land. Sharon was a
place of great fruitfulness for
pastures. It was become like a
wilderness, but God here
promises that it should again be
a place for the flocks. And the
valley of Achor a place, &c. —
Achor was a valley to the north
of Jericho, opposite to the town
of Ai, where Achan was put to
death, and which was remarkably
fertile, Joshua 7:26. For my
people that have sought me —
Lest the wicked, idolatrous Jews
should apply this promise to
themselves, God here limits it
to the people who should seek
him, that is, should turn to him
in true repentance and faith,
and seek his favour. That the
words have the force of such a
limitation appears from what
follows.
Verse 11
Isaiah 65:11. But, &c. — The
prophet now returns to address
his discourse to the sinners and
apostates, whom he had reproved
and threatened, (Isaiah 65:2-3,)
and renews his charge against
them for forsaking the Lord,
separating themselves from his
worship, and polluting
themselves with idolatry, the
most shameful and abominable in
his sight. Ye are they that
forsake the Lord — Let not any
of you that are idolaters and
covenant- breakers think that
these promises belong to you:
you are apostates from God’s
fear and love, his worship and
service, and have neither part
nor lot in this matter; that
forget my holy mountain — My
temple and worship, a figure of
the Christian Church. That
prepare a table, &c. — As God
had altars, which are sometimes
called tables, (see Ezekiel
41:22,) so they prepared altars
for their idols. By preparing a
table here, however, seems
rather to be meant the feasts
they made upon their sacrifices,
in imitation of what the true
God had commanded his people,
Deuteronomy 16:14-15; for that
troop — A troop of idols,
worshipped by the heathen; and
furnish the drink-offerings unto
their number — God had appointed
drink- offerings, as a sort of
homage to be paid to him; and
these people paid this homage to
their idols. The words gad and
meni, the former of which is
rendered troop here, and the
latter number, are thought by
many commentators to be the
names of certain idols. The LXX.
render the former word τω
δαιμονιω, the demon, or devil,
and the latter τη τυχη, fortune.
Or, according to the copy St.
Jerome seems to have used, they
have translated gad, fortune,
and meni, demon. Not to mention
the opinion of other learned
men, Dr. Waterland and Bishop
Lowth suppose that gad means the
sun, and meni, the moon. And it
seems very probable that the
moon, at least, is meant by one
of these names, being generally
worshipped throughout all the
East, and termed the queen of
heaven, and afterward by the
Greeks under the name of Hecate.
The idolatrous Jews erected
altars to this fancied goddess
on the tops of their houses, or
near their doors, and in the
corners of their streets, or in
groves, and offered to her
incense, cakes baked with oil
and honey, and drink-offerings
of wine, and other liquors. And
it appears to have been usual
among the Greeks from the most
ancient times, to spread in the
evening a table covered with
dainties, in the highways, in
honour to her. But it is of no
consequence to us what these
objects of idolatrous worship
were; nor have we any cause to
regret, that the inspired penmen
have not deigned to inform us,
but have “chosen rather that the
memory of the knowledge of them
should be utterly abolished. And
God be praised, that they are so
totally abolished that we are
quite at a loss to know what,
and what sort of things they
were.” — Schmidius, quoted by
Bishop Lowth.
Verse 12
Isaiah 65:12. Therefore will I
number you to the sword — “Here
the allusion to meni, which
signifies number, is obvious.”
And you shall all bow down to
the slaughter — As you have
bowed down to idols, which are
my enemies, I will make you bow
down to your enemies’ swords;
because when I called — Namely,
by my prophets, you did not
answer by doing the things that
I enjoined. But did evil before
mine eyes — You sinned
deliberately, choosing sinful
courses, the things which I
hated. It must be observed here,
that though the Jews, in the
time of Christ and his apostles,
(the period, it seems, referred
to,) were not guilty of such
idolatries as those above
mentioned, yet, as they
manifested the same spirit of
rebellion, perverseness, and
enmity to God, he therefore
threatens that he would number
them to the sword, as criminals
ordered for execution, which he
accordingly did, sending the
Roman armies to desolate their
country, lay their cities level
with the ground, and almost
extirpate their whole nation.
Verses 13-15
Isaiah 65:13-15. Behold, my
servants shall eat, but you
shall be hungry, &c. — I will
make a great difference between
my faithful servants and such
unbelievers as you are. This
promise the Lord fulfilled in a
remarkable manner before the
destruction of Jerusalem by the
Romans. In consequence of the
direction given by Christ to his
disciples, (Matthew 26:15,) when
they observed the Roman armies
approaching toward Jerusalem,
they left the devoted city and
fled to the mountains, an
opportunity for doing which
being given them by the special
providence of God. For after the
Romans, under Cestius Gallus,
made their first advance toward
Jerusalem, they suddenly
withdrew again in a most
unexpected, and, indeed,
impolitic manner; at which
Josephus testifies his surprise,
since the city might then have
been easily taken. By this means
they gave, as it were, a signal
to the Christians to retire;
which, out of regard to their
Lord’s admonition, they did,
some to Pella, and others to
mount Libanus, and thereby not
only preserved their lives, but
obtained a supply of all their
wants; while, in the mean time,
the unbelieving and disobedient
Jews, who had rejected and
crucified their Messiah,
pertinaciously seeking to defend
themselves in the city, were
overwhelmed with the greatest
calamities that ever came upon
any people, and perished with
hunger and thirst, the sword of
their enemies, and mutual
slaughters, in the greatest
anguish and despair, crying, as
it is here said, for sorrow of
heart, and howling for vexation
of spirit. And ye shall leave
your name for a curse unto my
chosen — That is, to the
Christians. They shall use your
name as examples of the eminent
wrath of God upon sinners; or,
as Vitringa reads it, Ye shall
leave your name for an oath to
my chosen; explaining the
meaning to be, “That the
punishment and calamity of these
apostates should be so
remarkable, that in the forms of
swearing, men should take their
example from the severity of the
divine judgment inflicted upon
them, and from their miserable
state; saying, ‘If I knowingly
and wilfully deceive, may as
great calamities happen to me as
have happened to those wicked
and apostate Jews.’” See
Jeremiah 29:22. For the Lord
shall slay thee — For you shall
not perish by an ordinary hand,
but by the hand of the Lord God.
Your destruction shall be most
extraordinary. The prophet may
either allude in this expression
to the total abolition of the
Jewish economy, or to the
prodigious slaughter made of
that people by one dreadful
massacre after another,
especially during the siege of
Jerusalem; and shall call his
servants by another name — God
himself shall consider your very
name as infamous and accursed,
and will not suffer his people
to be called by it. They shall
not be called Jews or
Israelites, but Christians. See
note on Isaiah 62:2.
Verse 16
Isaiah 65:16. That he who
blesseth himself in the earth —
In any part of the world, for
God shall have servants out of
all nations, that shall be
dignified with this new name;
shall bless himself in the God
of truth — That is, in his name;
shall renounce every species of
idolatry, and invoke and praise
the true God alone. They shall
have recourse to, and trust in,
him alone, for blessing and
happiness, and for a supply of
all their wants. Observe,
reader, it is of great
consequence what that is which
we bless ourselves in, and which
we most please ourselves with.
Worldly people bless themselves
in the abundance which they have
of this world’s goods, Psalms
49:18; Luke 12:19; but God’s
servants bless themselves in
him, as a God all- sufficient
for them. And he that sweareth,
&c. — By him also they shall
swear, and not by any creature,
or any false god. To his
judgment they shall refer
themselves, from whom every
man’s judgment proceeds. Both in
prayer and praise, and in every
act of homage and worship, they
shall give honour to him as the
God of truth — Hebrew, Amen,
which some understand of Christ,
who is himself the Amen, the
faithful and true witness, and
in whom all the promises are yea
and amen. In him we must bless
ourselves, and by him we must
swear unto the Lord, and
covenant with him. Some read it,
He that is blessed in the earth
shall be blessed in the true
God; for Christ is the true God
and eternal life, 1 John 5:20.
And it was promised of old, that
in him should all families of
the earth be blessed. Because
the former troubles are
forgotten — Namely, the troubles
of the church. They shall see
that what God hath promised he
hath also fulfilled, and that he
hath put an end to the troubles
of his people, the remembrance
of which shall be swallowed up
in their present comforts. The
chief reason of this is assigned
in the next verse.
Verses 17-19
Isaiah 65:17-19. For behold, I
create new heavens, &c. — I will
tell you yet a more admirable
thing: I am about wholly to
change the state, not only of my
people, freeing them from the
afflictions and troubles by
which they have been oppressed,
but also of the world, bringing
a new face upon it; sending my
Son to institute a new economy
and worship, and raise up a new
church; and pouring out my
Spirit in a more plentiful
manner; which new state shall
continue until a new heaven and
a new earth appear, in which
shall dwell nothing but
righteousness, 2 Peter 3:13;
Revelation 21:1. And the former
shall not be remembered — That
state of things shall be so
glorious, that the former state
of my people shall not be
noticed in comparison of it. But
be you glad and rejoice for ever
— You that are my people. Though
you cannot rejoice with that
degree of joy which will attend
the fruition of such a good, yet
be glad and rejoice with the
rejoicing of hope, for the thing
is certain, and what I have
already begun to do. Nor let
your present state, nor the
discouragements you have from
seeming improbabilities, prevent
your joy; for it is not a work
to be performed in an ordinary
way, or by an ordinary power,
but by that almighty and
creating energy which produces
and brings into being what
before had no existence. For
behold, I create Jerusalem —
Namely, the gospel church; a
rejoicing — That is, a cause and
source of joy, because of the
light and grace, the wisdom,
holiness, and happiness that
shall be possessed by its
members, the pure doctrine which
shall be held and professed, and
the excellent discipline which
shall be maintained in it; and
her people a joy — They shall
not only rejoice, but be
rejoiced in: those that sorrowed
with the church shall rejoice
with her. And I will rejoice in
Jerusalem — The prosperity of
the church shall be a rejoicing
to God himself, who has pleasure
in the prosperity of his
servants; and joy in my people —
Taking complacency in the work
of my grace wrought in them, and
in the works of righteousness
wrought by them. And the voice
of weeping shall be no more
heard — Such promises, many of
which are to be found in the
Scriptures, must either be
understood in a comparative
sense, meaning they shall suffer
no such misery as formerly, or
as signifying only some long or
eminent state of happiness;
unless they be referred to
another life, in which case they
may be taken strictly, as
signifying a perpetuity and
perfection of joy and happiness.
Verse 20
Isaiah 65:20. There shall be no
more thence an infant of days,
&c. — There shall he no untimely
or premature deaths, either of
infants and children, who do not
grow up to man’s estate, or of
old men, who do not live out the
full term of life. For the child
shall die, &c. — This should
rather be translated, For he
that dies a hundred years old
shall die a child: and the
sinner that dies a hundred years
old shall be (that is, shall be
deemed) accursed, or cut off by
the justice of God for his
crime. Thus “the prophet
describes this renovation of the
world as a paradisiacal state,
and such as the patriarchs
enjoyed before the flood, when
men commonly lived nearly a
thousand years. So he that died
at a hundred years of age would
have been looked upon as dying
in the age of childhood, and be
judged to have been cut off in
the beginning of his years, as a
punishment for some great sins
he had committed.” — Lowth. It
is justly observed here by Mr.
Scott, that “the event alone can
certainly determine whether this
is meant literally or
figuratively; but it is evident
that the universal prevalence of
real Christianity would so
terminate wars, murders,
contentions, idleness,
intemperance, and
licentiousness, as greatly to
lengthen out the general term of
man’s life. Many diseases which
now destroy thousands and tens
of thousands in the prime of
life, and communicate distempers
to succeeding generations,
would, in that case, scarcely be
heard of any more; and thus the
human constitution would soon be
much mended, and children would
generally come into the world
more vigorous and healthy than
they can do while vice so
greatly prevails. What God may
further intend in this matter we
cannot determine.” Vitringa’s
view of the passage seems to
have been, that “there shall be
no violent or punitive death in
this holy city, but that all the
inhabitants being holy, all
shall die full of days and
happy, and shall have, as it
were, a foretaste, pledge, and
earnest of life eternal, in
their long and happy life
below.”
Verses 21-23
Isaiah 65:21-23. They shall
build houses and inhabit them —
The prophet here describes
another privilege of the church
in these happy days. They shall
enjoy blessings the very reverse
of the curses denounced on the
disobedient, Deuteronomy 28:30.
They shall plant vineyards and
eat the fruit of them. See note
on Isaiah 62:8. They shall not
plant and another eat — Which
might happen, either through
their enemies seizing the fruits
of the trees they planted, or
through their own premature
death before those fruits were
brought to perfection. For as
the days of a tree are the days
of my people — Not like the
fading of a leaf, to which our
present frail state is often
compared, but their age shall
equal the duration of the trees
planted by them; yea, of the
oaks, the most long-lived of
trees, supposed to last about a
thousand years, being five
hundred years growing to full
perfection, and as many
decaying; “which,” says Bishop
Lowth, “seems to be a moderate
and probable computation.” The
LXX. translate this clause, γαρ
τας ημερας του ξυλου της ζωης
εσυνται αι ημεραι του λαου μου;
As the days of the tree of life
shall be the days of my people.
They shall not labour in vain —
As those do who do not enjoy the
fruit of their labour; nor bring
forth — Beget and bring forth
children; for trouble — Those
that shall give them trouble by
their bad conduct, or by the
poverty and misery in which they
shall be involved; for they are
the seed of the blessed of the
Lord, &c. — There is a blessing
entailed upon them by descent
from their ancestors, which
their offspring with them shall
partake of; who shall be a
comfort to them, and whom they
shall have the happiness to see
walking in the truth.
Verse 24
Isaiah 65:24. Before they call I
will answer — “Behold here,”
says Vitringa, “a desirable
blessing, the truest seal of
divine favour and paternal love.
The closest conjunction of
heaven and earth, that is, of
God and men, is expressed in
this verse; seeing that God
declares he will abundantly and
immediately satisfy the desires
of his people, which desires are
here supposed to be just and
conformable to his will; and
that he will be of such goodness
as of his own accord to prevent
their requests, and even answer
their prayers before they utter
them.”
Verse 25
Isaiah 65:25. The wolf and the
lamb shall feed together —
Concerning the metaphorical
sense of these expressions see
chap. 11:7, and 35:9. But since
the renovation here spoken of
extends to the whole creation,
the words may imply the
correcting the noxious qualities
of fierce or venomous creatures. |