Verse 1-2
Isaiah 66:1-2. Thus saith the
Lord, The heaven is my throne —
That is, the throne of my glory
and government; the place where
I most manifest my power, and
show myself in my majesty. Hence
we are taught to pray, Our
Father which art in heaven. And
the earth is my footstool — Or,
a place on which I set my feet,
(Matthew 5:35,) overruling all
the affairs of it according to
my will. Where is the house that
ye build me? — Can there be a
house built that will contain
me, who encompass and fill
heaven and earth? and where is
the place of my rest? — Where is
the place wherein I can be said
to rest in a proper sense? The
ark was indeed called God’s
footstool, and the place of his
rest, in a figurative sense,
because there God manifested
himself, though in degrees much
beneath the manifestations of
himself in heaven: but properly
God hath no certain place of
rest, and especially no temple
built by man can be a place of
rest for him. For what
satisfaction can the Eternal
Mind take in a house made with
men’s hands? What occasion has
he, as we have, for a house to
repose himself in, who fainteth
not, neither is weary; who
neither slumbers nor sleeps? Or,
if he had occasion, he would not
tell us, Psalms 50:12. For all
those things hath his hands made
— Heaven and all its courts,
earth and all its borders, and
all the hosts of both. And all
these have been — Have had their
beginning by the power of God,
who was infinitely happy from
eternity before they existed,
and therefore cannot be
benefited by them. Or, as the
clause may be rendered, all
these things are: they still
continue upheld by the same
power that made them; so that
our goodness extendeth not to
him. Vitringa is justly of
opinion that “this discourse is
directed to the hypocrites, who,
despising the gospel of the Son
of God, after they had made the
temple a den of thieves, were
yet zealous to repair and adorn
it. They did not consider that a
new economy being established,
no earthly and material temple
could be acceptable to Him whose
throne was in heaven, and who
everywhere found the place of
his rest in the humble and
contrite heart.” “The Jews,”
says Bishop Lowth, “valued
themselves much upon their
temple, and the pompous system
of services performed in it,
which they supposed were to be
of perpetual duration; and they
assumed great confidence and
merit to themselves for their
strict observance of all the
externals of their religion. And
at the very time when the
judgments denounced in Isaiah
66:6; Isaiah 66:12 of the
preceding chapter were hanging
over their heads, they were
rebuilding, by Herod’s
munificence, the temple in a
most magnificent manner. God,
therefore, admonishes them, that
the Most High dwelleth not in
temples made with hands; and
that a mere external worship,
how diligently soever attended,
when accompanied with wicked and
idolatrous practices in the
worshippers, would never be
accepted by him. This their
hypocrisy is set forth in strong
colours, which brings the
prophet again to the subject of
the former chapter; and he
pursues it in a different
manner, with more express
declarations of the new economy,
and of the flourishing state of
the church under it; the
increase of which he shows is to
be sudden and astonishing.”
But to this man will I look —
But though I regard not the
magnificence and splendour of a
temple built with human hands,
nor any ornaments that are or
can be bestowed upon it, nor the
pomp and show of the ceremonies
and services performed in it, or
connected with it; and though I
reign on a throne in majesty in
the highest heavens, and fill
both heaven and earth with my
glory, yet will I look with a
favourable eye to him that hath
a broken and contrite spirit —
Whose heart is subdued to the
will of God, and who is poor and
low in his own eyes; and that
trembleth at my word — Who
trembles when he hears my
threatening words, and receives
every revelation of my will with
reverence. Such a one is a
living temple of God, (Isaiah
57:15,) and of infinitely more
value in his sight than the most
sumptuous edifice that can be
raised by the art or power of
man, though it should be adorned
in the most costly manner with
gold and silver, and precious
stones.
Verse 3
Isaiah 66:3. He that killeth an
ox is as if he slew a man —
Without this humble and devout
temper of mind, killing an ox
for a burnt-offering is no more
acceptable to God than if a man
offered his son in sacrifice to
Moloch. “God here shows that the
external ritual worship, offered
to him by hypocrites and wicked
persons, void of faith and
virtue, was no more estimable in
his sight than the material
temple above spoken of; but that
he was as much offended by the
ritual worship of the impure, as
by the most grievous crimes
perpetrated against the
immediate commands of the law,
and particularly under the new
economy, after the promulgation
of the law of liberty, and the
perfect and true sacrifice
offered by Christ to expiate the
sins of the world. The
declaration is most important,
but will not be understood
unless by those who are well
acquainted with the interior
part of religion.” See Vitringa.
Solomon, it may be observed,
gives (Proverbs 15:8) a short
but full commentary on the whole
verse: The sacrifice of the
wicked is an abomination to the
Lord. He that sacrificeth a lamb
as if he cut off a dog’s neck —
Namely, in order to sacrifice
it. This animal was held in the
greatest abhorrence by the Jews,
insomuch that the very price of
a dog was forbidden to be
brought into the house of the
Lord, Deuteronomy 23:18. The
comparison shows God’s
detestation of ceremonial
performances from persons
destitute of true piety. He that
offereth, &c., as if he offered
swine’s blood — Which, being one
of the principal sacrifices
which the heathen offered to
their idols, was in a particular
manner abominable to God. He
that burneth incense as if he
blessed an idol — As if he
honoured an idol with gifts and
presents. From hence it is plain
that the prophet is not here
reflecting upon idolatrous
worship, but formal worship; for
to say, He that burneth incense
to an idol is as he that
blesseth an idol, would be only
to say, He that blesseth an
idol, blesseth an idol; that is,
it would be saying nothing. But
he is reflecting upon those who,
in a formal way, and not in
spirit and in truth, worshipped
the true God, and by acts which
he had appointed. God, by the
prophet, declares that these
men’s services were no more
acceptable to him than murder,
idolatry, or the most horrid
profanation of his name. Yea,
they have chosen their own ways
— They live as they list; they
persist in their wicked
practices, and yet expect to
recommend themselves to my
favour by their ceremonial
observances. And their soul
delighteth in their abominations
— Taking pleasure in their sins,
and showing their contempt of my
authority and enmity to my
holiness, as much as their
fathers did when they were mad
upon their idols.
Verse 4
Isaiah 66:4. I also will choose
their delusions — I will punish
them in their own way, and set
those over them as teachers who
shall govern them by their
traditions instead of my word.
Or, I will suffer false Christs
and false prophets to deceive
them, Matthew 24:24; John 5:43.
And I will bring their fears
upon them — This was exactly
fulfilled when, as they
crucified Christ for fear of the
Romans, (John 11:48,) that very
sin was punished with their
utter destruction by the Romans.
Because when I called — Because
when, by my servants, I called
you to repentance, to bring
forth fruit worthy of
repentance, and to believe in my
Son, your true Messiah; none did
answer — Very few yielded
obedience. He evidently speaks
of the calls to repentance, and
the invitations to believe in
Christ, given them by John the
Baptist, Jesus himself, and his
apostles and evangelists. When I
spake they did not hear — God
accounts that those do not hear
who do not obey his will.
Verse 5
Isaiah 66:5. Hear, &c. — The
prophet here, forbearing to
proceed in denouncing judgments
against the hypocrites and
formalists among the Jews, now
turns his discourse to such as
feared God, whose religion is
described by their trembling at
his word, as in Isaiah 66:2.
Such apostrophes, or diversions
of his speech to other persons,
we had Isaiah 50:10; Isaiah
51:1; Isaiah 51:7. The same
addresses, it must be observed,
belong not to saints and
presumptuous sinners. It is
highly probable, as Vitringa
supposes, that the apostles and
other disciples and followers of
Christ, who embraced the gospel,
who were the seed of the first
church, and were to constitute
that spiritual temple which God
had determined to build and
inhabit upon the abolition of
the material temple, are here
addressed and comforted by God,
on account of the contempt,
hatred, and excommunication of
them by their brethren among the
Jews and Pharisees. See John
16:2. Your brethren — By nation,
or by an external profession of
religion; though false brethren,
that cast you out — That cast
you out of their synagogues,
cast you out of their city, and
some of you out of the world;
for my name’s sake — For your
adherence to my law; said, Let
the Lord be glorified — Thinking
they did God good service, John
16:2. Or, we may understand it
as spoken in defiance of God; as
if he had said, You say God will
be glorified in your
deliverance. Let him be
glorified then. Let him make
speed and hasten his work,
Isaiah 5:19. Thus they derided
Christ, Let him deliver him
since he delighted in him. But
he shall appear to your joy, &c.
— There will come a time, which
is at no great distance, when
God will come forth, and let
them know his judgment
concerning their unjust and
violent proceedings. Then you
shall have joy, and they shall
be ashamed, 2 Thessalonians
1:6-8. This was fulfilled when,
upon the signal given of
Jerusalem’s approaching
destruction, the hearts of the
Jews failed them for fear: but
the disciples of Christ, whom
they hated and persecuted,
lifted up their heads with joy,
knowing that their redemption
drew nigh, Luke 21:26.
Verse 6
Isaiah 66:6. A voice of noise
from the city, &c. — This is an
expression of a prophetical
ecstasy, in which the prophet
hears the noise of the ruin of
the city and temple sounding in
his ears. This voice of noise
comes not from the city only,
but from the temple, wherein
these formalists had so much
gloried, and reposed so much
confidence. There is a noise of
soldiers slaying, and of the
poor people shrieking or crying
out. A voice of the Lord — Not
in thunder, which is sometimes
called the Lord’s voice, but
that rendereth recompense to his
enemies — Thus he expresses the
destruction of the Jews by the
Roman armies, as a thing at that
time doing. Some think this
prophecy was fulfilled, partly
at least, in the prodigies
which, according to Josephus, in
his history of the Jewish wars,
(lib. 7. cap. 12,) preceded the
destruction of Jerusalem: that
the eastern gate of the temple,
which was of solid brass and
very heavy, and was scarcely
shut in an evening by twenty
men, and was fastened by strong
bars and bolts, was seen, at the
sixth hour of the night, opened
of its own accord, and could
hardly be shut again: that
before the setting of the sun,
there were seen over all the
country chariots and armies
fighting in the clouds, and
besieging cities: that at the
feast of pentecost, as the
priests were going into the
inner temple by night, as usual,
to attend their service, they
heard first a motion and noise,
and then a voice, as of a
multitude, saying, Let us depart
hence; and, what he reckons as
the most terrible of all, that
one Jesus, the son of Ananus, an
ordinary country fellow, four
years before the war began, and
when the city was in peace and
plenty, came to the feast of
tabernacles, and ran crying up
and down the streets day and
night, A voice from the east, a
voice from the west, a voice
from the four winds, a voice
against Jerusalem and the
temple, a voice against the
bridegrooms and the brides, a
voice against all the people.
The magistrates endeavoured by
stripes and torture to restrain
him; but he still cried with a
mournful voice, Wo, wo to
Jerusalem! This he continued to
do for seven years and five
months together, and especially
at the great festivals; and he
neither grew hoarse nor was
tired, but went about the walls
and cried with a loud voice, Wo,
wo to the city, and to the
people, and to the temple! and,
as he added at last, Wo, wo also
to myself! it happened that a
stone from some sling or engine
immediately struck him dead. It
may be proper to remark here,
that there is not a more
creditable historian than
Josephus, who relates these
things, and who appeals to the
testimony of those who saw and
heard them. But, as Bishop
Newton observes, it may add some
weight to his relation, that
Tacitus, the Roman historian, a
heathen, also gives us a summary
account of the same occurrence.
He says, “There happened several
prodigies. Armies were seen to
engage in different parts of the
sky — glittering arms appeared —
the temple shone by the sudden
fire of the clouds — the doors
of the temple were suddenly
thrown wide open — a voice, more
than human, was heard, that the
gods were departing, and, at the
same time, a great motion as if
departing.” See Tacitus’s Hist.,
book 5. page 217, in Lipsius’s
edition.
Verse 7-8
Isaiah 66:7-8. Here begins a new
paragraph of the prophet’s
discourse, containing a
description of the sudden and
great increase of the Christian
Church, upon God’s rejecting the
Jews, and destroying their
temple and worship: “the very
destruction of the Jewish polity
making way for the reception and
spread of the gospel, inasmuch
as it abated that opposition
which the Jewish zealots all
along made to its progress; and
the abolishing the Jewish
worship contributed very much to
the abrogating the law of Moses,
and burying it with silence and
decency.” See Romans 11:11, and
Lowth. This paragraph, however,
is not unconnected with what
precedes. “It is,” as Vitringa
observes, “another consolatory
argument, directed to those who
reverenced the word of Jehovah,
and formed the true Zion, taken
from the rapid and wonderful
increase of the church among the
Gentiles, superior to all human
thought, all expectation. For
when in the former section
Isaiah had done two things;
first, had predicted the calling
of the Gentiles, (chap. 65:1,)
and then the punishment of the
ungodly, and such as rejected
the gospel; in this section,
after he had repeated the
indignation conceived by God
against the hypocrites and those
who did not obey the gospel, he
in the same manner comforts the
pious Jews, from the unexpected
event of the most wished-for
success of the calling of the
Gentiles, who, joined with them
in one body, should form one
church, and inherit the earth.”
Before she travailed she brought
forth — The church is
represented here as a travailing
woman, the mother of all true
believers: see Isaiah 54:1;
Galatians 4:26. The whole verse
is expressive of a great and
sudden salvation which God would
work for his church, like the
delivery of a woman, and that
before her travail, and without
pain, of a man-child. It
undoubtedly refers to the
introduction of the gospel, and
its rapid and unexpected
progress. Who hath heard such a
thing? — The prophet here calls
either to the whole world, or to
such as feared God among the
Jews, to admire his stupendous
work of providence and grace, in
the sudden erection and
wonderful enlargement of the
gospel church. Who hath seen
such things? — Who hath
witnessed such an extraordinary
event? Shall the earth be made
to bring forth in one day, or
shall a nation, &c. — “The
suddenness of this event is as
surprising as if the fruits of
the earth, which are brought to
perfection by slow degrees,
should blossom and ripen all in
one day. And the fruitfulness of
this spiritual increase is as
wonderful as if a whole nation
were born at once, or by one
woman.” For as soon as Zion
travailed — As soon as the
fulness of time came for
erecting the gospel church; she
brought forth her children — In
great multitudes, without pain
or difficulty, no inauspicious
circumstance occurring to
prevent their birth: see Acts
2:41; and Acts 4:4.
Verse 9
Isaiah 66:9. Shall I bring to
the birth — Shall I disappoint
and render abortive a design of
which I myself was the author,
when every thing is ripe for
execution, and the effect just
ready to be produced? Shall I
begin a work and not perfect it?
Shall I cause to bring forth,
and shut the womb — That there
should not be a continual
succession of converts in all
ages? Zion shall not bring forth
once only, but she shall
continue to be fruitful: her
womb shall not be shut: she
shall every day bring forth more
and more children, and my
presence shall be with my church
to the end of the world. Thus
the prophet still carries on the
comparison between the natural
and the spiritual birth.
Verse 10-11
Isaiah 66:10-11. Rejoice ye with
Jerusalem — Let all that wish
her well congratulate her for
the favours God hath conferred
upon her, and particularly let
the Gentiles rejoice with the
Jewish Church, for her
advancement shall redound to
their benefit. Thus Moses,
(Deuteronomy 32:43,) referring
probably to the very events here
predicted by Isaiah, Rejoice, O
ye nations, with his people; for
he will avenge the blood of his
servants, and will render
vengeance to his adversaries,
and will be merciful unto his
land and to his people. Be glad
with her, all ye that love her —
All that love God love the
church of God, lay its interests
very near their hearts, and
heartily espouse its cause. And
they that have a sincere
affection for it have a cordial
sympathy with it in all the
cares and sorrows of its
militant state. They mourn for
Zion in her afflictions and
troubles: her grievances excite
their sorrows; and if she be in
distress, their harps are hung
on the willows. But here
Jerusalem is represented as
having great cause for
rejoicing; the days of her
mourning are at an end, and she
is comforted according to the
time in which she hath seen
adversity. And of course all her
friends, who sympathized with
her in her sorrows, are here
invited to join with her in her
joys, because they are to
participate in those blessings
from which her joys are derived.
That ye may suck — Or, because
ye shall suck: and be satisfied
with the breasts of her
consolations — The word of God,
the covenant of grace,
especially the promises of that
covenant, gospel ordinances, and
all the opportunities of
attending on God, and conversing
with him, are breasts of the
church’s consolations. In these
her comforts are laid up, and
thence they are drawn by faith
and prayer. From these breasts,
therefore, we must suck by an
application of the promises of
God to ourselves, and a diligent
attendance on his ordinances;
and with the consolations which
are drawn thence we must be
satisfied, and not be
unsatisfied though we have a
very small share of earthly
comforts. That ye may be
delighted with the abundance of
her glory — It is the glory of
the church that she hath the
Lord for her God; that to her
pertains the adoption and the
service of God; and with the
abundance of this glory we must
be delighted. We must take more
pleasure in our relation to God,
and communion with him, than in
all the delights of the sons and
daughters of men. Whatever is
the glory of the church must be
our glory and joy, particularly
her purity, unity, and increase.
Verse 12-13
Isaiah 66:12-13. For, behold, I
will extend — Or am extending,
peace to her — That is, all
good; like a river — That runs
in a constant stream, still
increasing till it is swallowed
up in the ocean. The gospel
brings with it, wherever it is
received in its power, peace,
which proceeds forward like a
river, supplying the souls of
believers with all good, and
making them fruitful as a river
doth the lands through which it
passes: such peace as the
springs of this world’s comforts
cannot send forth, and the dams
of the world’s troubles cannot
stop or drive back; such a river
of peace as will carry us to the
ocean of boundless and endless
bliss. And the glory of the
Gentiles like a flowing stream —
Gentile converts shall come
pouring into the church, and
shall swell the river of her
peace and prosperity; for they
shall bring their glory with
them; their wealth and honour,
their power and interest shall
all be devoted to the Lord and
employed for the good of the
church. Then shall ye suck — Ye
Jews also. When you see such
crowding for a share in those
comforts, you shall be the more
solicitous, and the more earnest
and diligent to secure your
share; not through a fear lest
you should have the less,
because others come in such
multitudes to partake of them,
for Christ has enough for all,
and enough for each; but their
zeal shall provoke you to a holy
jealousy. Ye shall be borne upon
her sides — Compare chap. 60:4,
where see the note. Those that
are joined to the church should
be treated thus affectionately.
The great Shepherd gathers the
lambs in his arms, and carries
them in his bosom; and so must
the under shepherds, that young
converts may not be discouraged.
As one whom his mother
comforteth, &c. — That is, in
the most tender and
compassionate way. So will I
comfort you — I will not only
use rational arguments to
comfort you, such as a prudent
father uses toward his child in
distress, but I will manifest
toward you such tender
affections and compassions, as a
loving mother feels toward her
afflicted infant. And ye shall
be comforted in Jerusalem — In
the favours bestowed on the
church, which you shall partake
of; and in the thanksgivings
offered by the church, which you
shall concur with.
Verse 14
Isaiah 66:14. And when ye see
this — To what a happy state the
church is restored; your heart
shall rejoice — The peace of the
church, and the extension of the
kingdom of Christ, are always
causes of real joy to such as
fear God. And your bones shall
flourish like an herb — The
bones that were dried and
withered, the marrow of them
being quite exhausted, shall
recover a youthful strength and
vigour, and shall flourish like
an herb in the spring, whose
verdure and beauty in the winter
were concealed in the root hid
in the earth. In other words,
you Jews shall recover your
ancient strength and glory, and
be renewed in as wonderful a
manner as if dry, withered bones
should recover their youth and
moisture: or, as if the dead
bones in a charnel-house should
be united with sinews, clothed
again with flesh and skin, and
should have life and vigour
infused into them. Then shall be
effected that resurrection of
the dry bones spoken of by
Ezekiel 37:1, &c., for that
vision relates to the
restoration of the Jewish
nation, after it had lain for
many ages in a dead, hopeless
condition. In like manner St.
Paul calls the receiving of the
Jews into the church, life from
the dead, Romans 11:15. And the
hand of the Lord shall be known
toward his servants — The power,
protection, and influence of God
shall be made manifest for, and
upon, all such as truly serve
and obey him. And his
indignation toward his enemies —
But the wicked shall experience
a quite contrary dispensation,
Psalms 1:4. As God’s hand shall
be upon and toward such as fear
him, to cover, bless, and
influence them, so his
indignation shall in that day be
showed toward those of your
nation who have manifested
themselves to be his enemies.
Verse 15-16
Isaiah 66:15-16. For, behold,
&c. — Here the prophet comes
more particularly to show the
nature of that indignation which
should be exercised toward God’s
enemies. The passage, it must be
observed, is metaphorical,
“exhibiting God as about to take
vengeance on the enemies of his
church, under the figure of a
commander and warrior, as well
as of a judge, armed at all
points, severely to punish those
who have provoked his
indignation: see Isaiah 63:1,
&c.; Revelation 18:8; and
Revelation 14:20. Some suppose
that this passage refers to the
general judgment; but it is
rather, according to the whole
tenor of this prophecy, to be
referred to the judgments of God
upon the rebellious Jews, and
upon the antichristian enemies
of the church.” The Lord will
come with fire — With terrible
judgments: an allusion possibly
to the fire with which enemies
use to consume places brought
under their power. And with his
chariots — Like the general of a
victorious army. With a
whirlwind — With a sudden
sweeping calamity, that, like a
whirlwind, shall destroy all
before it. To render his anger
with fury — That is, with
fervour; for fury, properly
taken, is not in God, Isaiah
27:4. But God, at certain times,
executes judgment more severely
than at others. And his rebukes
— By rebukes he means
punishments, for it is said God
will execute them with flames of
fire — They had contemned the
rebukes of the law, now God will
rebuke them with fire and sword.
For by fire, &c., will the Lord
plead with all flesh — God at
first pleads with sinners by
word, but if he cannot so
prevail, he will plead with them
in a way by which he will
overcome; by fire, pestilence,
and blood. Thus he threatens to
do with all flesh, that is, with
all sinners continuing in sin,
and especially with the
impenitent and unbelieving Jews,
who, being favoured with the
oracles and ordinances of God,
held the truth in
unrighteousness, and abused
their extraordinary privileges
to their greater condemnation:
see Romans 2:8-9. And the slain
of the Lord shall be many —
Those whom God should cause to
be slain. This was awfully
fulfilled in the destruction
brought on the Jews by the
Romans for crucifying the
Messiah; no fewer than eleven
hundred thousand, according to
Josephus, perishing in the siege
of Jerusalem, and at least three
hundred thousand more during the
war; not to mention the vast
numbers that perished in caves,
woods, wildernesses, common
sewers, of whom no account could
be taken; and the great
slaughter made of them afterward
in the wars waged against them
by Adrian, when fifty of their
strongest fortresses were razed,
and nine hundred and eighty-five
of their noblest towns were
sacked, and consumed by fire.
See note on Deuteronomy 28:62.
Verse 17
Isaiah 66:17. They that sanctify
themselves, &c. — “Behold,” says
Vitringa, “the reason of the
great severity above mentioned,
namely, a base and abominable
departure from God, represented
under a certain kind of idolatry
and detestable superstition, of
all others the most odious and
contrary to the institutions of
the ancient religion.” It is
evident the passage is to be
understood figuratively, like
those in Isaiah 66:3, and in
Isaiah 65:3-4; Isaiah 65:11, on
which see the notes. And purify
themselves in the gardens —
There were several sorts of
lustrations, or purifications,
used among the heathen, from
whence the Jews learned their
idolatrous customs, some of
which were performed by
washings, for which purpose they
had fountains in their sacred
groves and gardens. Behind one
tree — The word tree is not in
the Hebrew. The words are אחר
אחד, achar achad, which may
signify, after the manner of
achad. Or, as Bishop Lowth
renders it, after the rites of
achad; observing, “the Syrians
worshipped a god called Adad,
whom they held to be the highest
and greatest of the gods, and to
be the same with Jupiter and the
sun: and the name Adad, says
Macrobius, signifies one, as
likewise does the word achad, in
Isaiah. Many learned men,
therefore, have supposed, and
with some probability, that the
prophet means the same pretended
deity. But whatever the
particular mode of idolatry
might be, the general sense of
the verse is perfectly clear.”
It is plainly a reproof of the
wicked Jews for the many
idolatries and superstitions of
which they were guilty, and
which are here set forth in
figurative language, borrowed
from the abominable practices to
which many of the Jews were
addicted in Isaiah’s time; who
privately, in enclosed gardens
which were not exposed to view,
performed the heathen
lustrations, sacrificed in the
heathen manner, and to their
gods, and eat meats which were
prohibited by the law as
unclean, although in public they
pretended to be true Jews, or
strict observers of the law.
Eating swine’s flesh —
Forbidden, Leviticus 11:7;
Deuteronomy 14:8. And the
abomination — Other abominable
meats forbidden to the Jews; and
the mouse — The word which we
translate mouse being nowhere
found but Leviticus 11:29; 1
Samuel 6:4-5; 1 Samuel 6:11; 1
Samuel 6:18, and here, some
think it is not that creature
which we call a mouse, but
rather signifies some serpent.
Be this as it may, the sense
evidently is, that God would not
only destroy the open and gross
idolaters and superstitious
persons, but all those who made
no conscience of yielding
obedience to the law of God in
such things as seemed to them of
a trivial nature, and in which
they easily might have yielded
obedience. The Lord here assures
them that they should all perish
together. Observe, reader, in
the day of final judgment, the
idolatrous pagan or Papist, and
the ungodly Protestant, shall
fare alike. For no man can
reasonably imagine that either
baptism, or a profession of
Christianity, can save a man
from God’s wrath without
holiness, any more than
circumcision, and the being
reputed a member in the Jewish
Church.
Verses 18-20
Isaiah 66:18-20. For I know
their works and their thoughts —
Of idolatry, superstition, and
other wickedness. The word know
not being in the Hebrew, some
apply the ellipsis thus: I have
observed their works, &c. Others
consider the clause as a
question, and read, Should I
endure their works, &c.? No: it
shall come, that I will gather,
&c. — My threatened judgments
shall come upon them, and I will
gather all nations and tongues
to see my glorious holiness and
justice manifested in their
punishment. Or the sense may be,
Because I know and will no
longer bear with their works,
therefore it shall come to pass
that I will cast them off, and
then I will gather all nations,
&c. — That is, take the Gentiles
to be my people in their stead.
This sense of the clause agrees
well with what follows. And they
shall see my glory — My oracles,
my holy institutions and
ordinances, which hitherto have
been locked up in the church of
the Jews, and have been their
glory, shall be published to the
Gentiles, Psalms 97:6; and
Isaiah 40:5. And I will set a
sign among them — It is agreed
by all, that this is a prophecy
concerning the conversion of the
Gentiles. By a sign here some
understand an ensign, as the
word אותsignifies, Psalms 74:4,
which is a military sign, to
gather people together, to
which, as is promised Isaiah
11:12, the Gentiles shall seek.
The preaching of the word seems
to be intended, accompanied with
miracles called signs, or
followed by some distinguishing
providence, whereby they should
be preserved from the common
destruction. And I will send
those that escape of them unto
the nations — Those few Jews
who, being converted to the
Christian faith, escaped the
national impenitence and
unbelief, and the common
destruction of the nation; and
many of them, the apostles in
particular, shall be employed in
all parts of the world, for the
conversion of others, Matthew
28:19; Acts 13:46. Tarshish,
Pul, Lud, and the other places
here mentioned, are intended to
signify the different quarters
of the world into which the
gospel would be sent. And they
shall declare my glory among the
Gentiles — The glorious riches
of my grace in Christ. And they
shall bring all your brethren,
&c. — The apostles and gospel
ministers thus sent abroad shall
bring the converts of the
Gentiles, who are your brethren
in Christ, (Galatians 3:28,)
Abraham’s spiritual seed; for an
offering unto the Lord — Who
will have no more offerings of
bullocks, or rams, or lambs, but
will have men and women,
reasonable oblations, Romans
12:1. He will particularly have
the offering up of the Gentiles,
which shall be acceptable, being
sanctified by the Holy Ghost,
Romans 15:16. Upon horses and in
chariots, &c. — That is, by
every method of conveyance then
in use. To my holy mountain,
Jerusalem — That is, to the
Christian Church, typified by
Jerusalem. As the children of
Israel bring an offering in a
clean vessel — These converted
Gentiles shall be a holy people,
and therefore acceptable to God.
Verse 21
Isaiah 66:21. I will also take
of them for priests and for
Levites — God will find among
the converted Gentiles those
who, though they are not of the
tribe of Levi, yet shall do the
true work of the priests and
Levites. They shall minister in
holy things, preside in the
religious assemblies, teach the
people, and bless in the name of
the Lord. They shall be stewards
of the mysteries of God, as the
priests and Levites were under
the law; angels or messengers of
the churches, pastors overseeing
and feeding their several
flocks, elders, presbyters, or
bishops, giving themselves to
the word of God and prayer,
(Acts 6:2-4,) and wholly
occupied in these holy duties.
The apostles were all Jews, and
so were the seventy disciples;
the great apostle of the
Gentiles was himself a Hebrew of
the Hebrews. But when churches
were planted among the Gentiles,
they had ministers appointed
them who were, of themselves,
elders in every church, Acts
14:23; Titus 1:5; which made the
ministry to spread the more
easily, and to be the more
familiar, and, if not the more
venerable, yet the more
acceptable. God saith, I will
take, not all them, though they
are all, in a spiritual sense,
made to our God kings and
priests, but of them, that is,
some of them. It is God’s work
to choose ministers, by
qualifying them for, and
inclining them to, the service,
as well as to make ministers, by
giving them their commission. I
will take them — That is, I will
admit them, though Gentiles, and
will accept of them and their
ministrations. This is a great
honour and advantage to the
Gentile Church, as it was to the
Jewish Church, that God raised
up of their sons for prophets,
and their young men for
Nazarites, Amos 2:11.
Verse 22-23
Isaiah 66:22-23. For as the new
heavens, &c. — The new state of
the church to be raised up under
the Messiah; shall remain before
me — Unalterable. As the gospel
dispensation is to be continued
till the end of time, and not to
be succeeded by any other; as it
shall therefore remain, because
it is before me, under my eye,
my care, and special protection;
so shall your seed and your name
remain — A seed of ministers, a
seed of Christians. As one
generation of both passeth away,
another generation shall come,
and thus the name of Christ,
with that of Christians, shall
continue on earth while the
earth remains, and his throne as
the days of heaven! The gates of
hell, though they fight against
the church, shall not prevail
against it, nor wear out the
saints of the Most High: for
there shall be a daily
succession of true believers for
the upholding of it; for, if
believers could fail from the
earth, the church, made up of
them only, as the true members
of it, must fail also. And from
one new-moon to another, &c. —
In the gospel church there shall
be as constant and settled a
course of worship, (though of
another nature,) as ever was in
the Jewish Church. This is
described in expressions suited
to the Old Testament
dispensation, to show that,
though the ceremonial law should
be abolished, and the temple
service at an end, yet God
should be still as regularly,
statedly, and acceptedly
worshipped as ever. Heretofore
the Jews were only obliged to
appear three times in a year at
the place of God’s public
worship, but, saith the prophet,
in the gospel church people
shall worship from one new moon
to another, and from one sabbath
to another — They shall be
perpetually employed in serving
and glorifying him, although in
different ways. Their state
shall be one continued festival.
And whereas, under the former
dispensation, the Jews only were
bound to attend God’s worship at
the great feasts, and of them
only the males; now, under the
new dispensation, all flesh,
Gentiles as well as Jews, women
as well as men, shall come and
worship before God — That is,
shall worship in his presence,
though not in his temple at
Jerusalem, but in religious
assemblies dispersed all over
the world, which shall be to
them as the tabernacle of
meeting was to the Jews: God
will in them record his name;
and, though but two or three
come together, he will be in the
midst of them, will meet and
bless them.
Verse 24
Isaiah 66:24. And they shall go
forth — Namely, those who had
joined themselves to the
communion of the church spoken
of in the preceding verses; and
look upon the carcasses of the
men that have sinned against me
— Meaning chiefly the
unbelieving Jews who rejected
Christ and his gospel,
including, however, all
impenitent sinners, and
especially all the enemies and
persecutors of God’s truth and
people. By looking upon their
carcasses is meant beholding the
dreadful vengeance taken on
them. This is here represented
in figurative language. The
misery is described by an
allusion to the frightful
spectacle of a field of battle
covered with the carcasses of
the slain, which lie rotting
upon the ground, full of worms,
crawling about them, and feeding
on them. It seems the Lord, by
his prophet, first intends to
set forth the dreadful temporal
calamities that should come upon
the Jews, in the destruction of
their city and nation by the
Romans; in which destruction, as
has been intimated in the note
on Isaiah 66:16, not less than
between two and three millions,
first and last, were cut off by
the sword, famine, and
pestilence. But when it is
added, for their worm shall not
die, neither shall their fire be
quenched, it is certain the
punishment of the wicked in the
world to come is chiefly
intended. These words, it is
well known, are applied by our
Saviour, (Mark 9:44,) to express
the everlasting punishment of
the wicked in Gehenna, or hell,
so called, in allusion to the
valley of Hinnom, the place
where the idolatrous Jews
celebrated that horrible rite of
making their children pass
through the fire, that is, of
burning them in sacrifice to
Moloch; concerning which place
see note Isaiah 30:33. “Our
Saviour,” says Bishop Lowth,
expressed the state of the
blessed by sensible images; such
as paradise, Abraham’s bosom,
or, which is the same thing, a
place to recline next to Abraham
at table, in the kingdom of
heaven; (see Matthew 8:11; John
13:23;) for we could not
possibly have any conception of
it, but by analogy from worldly
objects: in like manner he
expressed the place of torment
under the image of Gehenna; and
the punishment of the wicked by
the worm, which there preyed on
the carcasses, and the fire,
which consumed the wretched
victims. Marking, however, in
the strongest manner, the
difference between Gehenna and
the invisible place of torment:
namely, that in the former, the
suffering is transient; the worm
itself, that preys on the body,
dies: whereas, in the figurative
Gehenna, the instruments of
punishment shall be everlasting,
and the suffering without end;
for there the worm dieth not,
and the fire is not quenched.
“These emblematical images,
expressing heaven and hell, were
in use among the Jews before our
Saviour’s time; and in using
them, he complied with their
notions. Blessed is he that
shall eat bread in the kingdom
of God, says the Jew to our
Saviour, Luke 14:15. And, in
regard to Gehenna, the Chaldee
paraphrast renders everlasting,
or continual burnings, by the
Gehenna of everlasting fire. And
before this time the son of
Sirach (Sirach 7:17) had said,
The vengeance of the ungodly is
fire and worms. So likewise the
author of the book of Judith,
‘Wo to the nation rising up
against my kindred, the Lord
Almighty will take vengeance on
them in the day of judgment,
putting fire and worms in their
flesh:’ Judith 16:17, manifestly
referring to the same emblem.”
And they shall be an abhorring
unto all flesh — Hebrew דראון,
an execration, as Dr. Waterland
renders it. “Christ the Lord,”
says Vitringa, “in passing his
judicial sentence on false
Christians and wicked persons,
will say, Go, ye cursed: or
execrated, into eternal fire.
That evil will be added to their
state of pain, and a condemning
conscience. Separated from the
blessed and glorious communion
of God and the saints, cast into
the deepest state of misery,
they will be exposed to the
reproach, ignominy, contempt,
and execration of angels and
saints,” (say rather of devils
and condemned spirits,)
“suffering the punishment of
their pride, arrogance, tyranny,
cruelty, injustice, crimes,
hatred of the truth,
persecutions, by which things in
this life, fighting against God,
and afflicting his saints, they
knowingly and willingly provoked
his displeasure. These are the
ends of the two opposite kinds
of men, the pious and the
ungodly, in which, after various
preparatory judgments of God,
the fates of all ages as well as
our own fates, will be
terminated, and in which this
divine book of the great Prophet
Isaiah also terminates. May our
lot be with the saints, with
those who reverence God and love
the truth; with the humble, the
meek, the merciful, and those
that persevere in good works to
the end of life, through the
grace of our great Lord,
Saviour, and Judge, Jesus
Christ, who will distribute
these blessings according to the
will of his Father.”
This eminent divine concludes
his very learned commentary on
this incomparable prophecy with
the following devout prayer and
thanksgiving, with which the
author of this work, adopting
his words, also closes his
observations thereon.
“Influenced by which hope, and
prostrate before his throne, I
return, with the most profound
humility, my sincerest thanks to
God the Father, in his Son Jesus
Christ, by the Spirit, for the
grace and light wherewith he
hath favoured me, his unworthy
servant, during my comment on
this book; earnestly requesting
from his grace and mercy that,
pardoning the errors into which
I have ignorantly fallen, he
would render this work, of
whatever sort it is, conducive
to the glory of his great name,
the benefit of the church, and
the consolation of the pious.”
Amen! |