kecilkan semua  

Teks -- Isaiah 27:1-13 (NET)

Tampilkan Strong
Konteks
27:1 At that time the Lord will punish with his destructive, great, and powerful sword Leviathan the fast-moving serpent, Leviathan the squirming serpent; he will kill the sea monster. 27:2 When that time comes, sing about a delightful vineyard! 27:3 I, the Lord, protect it; I water it regularly. I guard it night and day, so no one can harm it. 27:4 I am not angry. I wish I could confront some thorns and briers! Then I would march against them for battle; I would set them all on fire, 27:5 unless they became my subjects and made peace with me; let them make peace with me. 27:6 The time is coming when Jacob will take root; Israel will blossom and grow branches. The produce will fill the surface of the world. 27:7 Has the Lord struck down Israel like he did their oppressors? Has Israel been killed like their enemies? 27:8 When you summon her for divorce, you prosecute her; he drives her away with his strong wind in the day of the east wind. 27:9 So in this way Jacob’s sin will be forgiven, and this is how they will show they are finished sinning: They will make all the stones of the altars like crushed limestone, and the Asherah poles and the incense altars will no longer stand. 27:10 For the fortified city is left alone; it is a deserted settlement and abandoned like the desert. Calves graze there; they lie down there and eat its branches bare. 27:11 When its branches get brittle, they break; women come and use them for kindling. For these people lack understanding, therefore the one who made them has no compassion on them; the one who formed them has no mercy on them. 27:12 At that time the Lord will shake the tree, from the Euphrates River to the Stream of Egypt. Then you will be gathered up one by one, O Israelites. 27:13 At that time a large trumpet will be blown, and the ones lost in the land of Assyria will come, as well as the refugees in the land of Egypt. They will worship the Lord on the holy mountain in Jerusalem.
Paralel   Ref. Silang (TSK)   ITL  

Nama Orang, Nama Tempat, Topik/Tema Kamus

Nama Orang dan Nama Tempat:
 · Assyria a member of the nation of Assyria
 · Egypt descendants of Mizraim
 · Euphrates a large river which joins the Tigris river before flowing into the Persian Gulf,a river flowing from eastern Turkey to the Persian Gulf
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Jacob the second so of a pair of twins born to Isaac and Rebeccaa; ancestor of the 12 tribes of Israel,the nation of Israel,a person, male,son of Isaac; Israel the man and nation
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin
 · Leviathan a twisting aquatic monster, possibly the crocodile of the Nile, and used symbolically of Assyria and Babylonia (by the twisting Euphrates River IBD).


Topik/Tema Kamus: Isaiah | ISAIAH, 1-7 | Leviathan | Altar | Church | Dragon | God | Symbols and Similitudes | Parables | Temple | STREAM OF EGYPT | River of Egypt | WINDS | Vineyard | Chalk | Women | Blindness | FIRE | SUN-WORSHIP | WIND | selebihnya
Daftar Isi

Catatan Kata/Frasa
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Catatan Kata/Frasa
Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Catatan Ayat / Catatan Kaki
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Catatan Rentang Ayat
Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

kecilkan semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Kata/Frasa (per frasa)

Wesley: Isa 27:1 - Leviathan By this leviathan, serpent and dragon (for all signify the same thing) be understands some powerful enemy or enemies of God, and of his church or peop...

By this leviathan, serpent and dragon (for all signify the same thing) be understands some powerful enemy or enemies of God, and of his church or people, which may well be called by these names, partly for their great might, and partly for the great terror and destruction which they cause upon the earth.

Wesley: Isa 27:1 - The piercing Which by its sting pierces deeply into mens bodies.

Which by its sting pierces deeply into mens bodies.

Wesley: Isa 27:1 - Crooked serpent Winding and turning itself with great variety and dexterity. Whereby he seems to signify the craftiness and activity of this enemy, whose strength mak...

Winding and turning itself with great variety and dexterity. Whereby he seems to signify the craftiness and activity of this enemy, whose strength makes it more formidable.

Wesley: Isa 27:2 - In that day When this enemy shall be destroyed.

When this enemy shall be destroyed.

Wesley: Isa 27:2 - A vineyard My church and people, of red wine, of the choicest and best wine, which in those parts was red.

My church and people, of red wine, of the choicest and best wine, which in those parts was red.

Wesley: Isa 27:3 - I keep it I will protect my church from all her enemies, and supply her with all necessary provisions.

I will protect my church from all her enemies, and supply her with all necessary provisions.

Wesley: Isa 27:5 - Or Or if at any time fury seem to be in me against my people.

Or if at any time fury seem to be in me against my people.

Wesley: Isa 27:5 - Let him My people.

My people.

Wesley: Isa 27:5 - Take hold Which he may by humble prayer not only restrain from doing him hurt, but engage to do him good.

Which he may by humble prayer not only restrain from doing him hurt, but engage to do him good.

Wesley: Isa 27:6 - Take root To be firmly settled in their possessions.

To be firmly settled in their possessions.

Wesley: Isa 27:6 - Fruit Their posterity shall seek habitations in other countries, and replenish them with people. But this seems to be understood of the spiritual seed of Ja...

Their posterity shall seek habitations in other countries, and replenish them with people. But this seems to be understood of the spiritual seed of Jacob.

Wesley: Isa 27:7 - Hath he He hath not dealt so severely with his people, as he hath dealt with their enemies, whom he hath utterly destroyed.

He hath not dealt so severely with his people, as he hath dealt with their enemies, whom he hath utterly destroyed.

Wesley: Isa 27:7 - Of them Of those who were slain by God on the behalf of Israel.

Of those who were slain by God on the behalf of Israel.

Wesley: Isa 27:8 - In measure With moderation.

With moderation.

Wesley: Isa 27:8 - When When the vine shooteth forth its luxuriant branches, he cuts them off, but so as not to destroy the vine.

When the vine shooteth forth its luxuriant branches, he cuts them off, but so as not to destroy the vine.

Wesley: Isa 27:8 - Contend God is said to contend with men, when he executes his judgments upon them, Amo 7:4.

God is said to contend with men, when he executes his judgments upon them, Amo 7:4.

Wesley: Isa 27:8 - Stayeth He mitigates the severity of the judgment.

He mitigates the severity of the judgment.

Wesley: Isa 27:8 - In the day In the time when he sends forth his east - wind; which he mentions because that wind in those parts was most violent and most hurtful.

In the time when he sends forth his east - wind; which he mentions because that wind in those parts was most violent and most hurtful.

Wesley: Isa 27:9 - By this By this manner of God's dealing with them.

By this manner of God's dealing with them.

Wesley: Isa 27:9 - When Which sin of Jacob's shall be purged, when he shall truly repent of all his sins, and especially of his idolatry.

Which sin of Jacob's shall be purged, when he shall truly repent of all his sins, and especially of his idolatry.

Wesley: Isa 27:9 - Altar Their idolatrous altars. Possibly he may say the altar, with respect to that particular altar, which Ahaz had set upon the place of God's own altar; a...

Their idolatrous altars. Possibly he may say the altar, with respect to that particular altar, which Ahaz had set upon the place of God's own altar; and this prophecy might be delivered in Ahaz's time, while that altar stood.

Wesley: Isa 27:9 - Chalk stones - When he shall break all those goodly altars in pieces.

stones - When he shall break all those goodly altars in pieces.

Wesley: Isa 27:9 - Not stand Shall be thrown down with contempt.

Shall be thrown down with contempt.

Wesley: Isa 27:10 - Yet Yet before this glorious promise be fulfilled, a dreadful and desolating judgment shall come.

Yet before this glorious promise be fulfilled, a dreadful and desolating judgment shall come.

Wesley: Isa 27:10 - The city Jerusalem and the rest of the defenced cities in the land.

Jerusalem and the rest of the defenced cities in the land.

Wesley: Isa 27:10 - The habitation The most inhabited and populous places.

The most inhabited and populous places.

Wesley: Isa 27:10 - The calf This is put for all sorts of cattle, which may securely feed there, because there shall be no men left to disturb them.

This is put for all sorts of cattle, which may securely feed there, because there shall be no men left to disturb them.

Wesley: Isa 27:11 - Broken That there may be no hopes of their recovery.

That there may be no hopes of their recovery.

Wesley: Isa 27:11 - Women He mentions women, because the men would be destroyed.

He mentions women, because the men would be destroyed.

Wesley: Isa 27:11 - Not understanding They know not the things which concerns their peace, but they blindly and wilfully go on in sin.

They know not the things which concerns their peace, but they blindly and wilfully go on in sin.

Wesley: Isa 27:11 - Therefore Thus he overthrows their conceit that God would never destroy the work of his own hands.

Thus he overthrows their conceit that God would never destroy the work of his own hands.

Wesley: Isa 27:12 - Beat out It is a metaphor from grain which was beaten out with a rod or staff, and then carefully gathered and laid up.

It is a metaphor from grain which was beaten out with a rod or staff, and then carefully gathered and laid up.

Wesley: Isa 27:12 - From From Euphrates to the Nile, which were the two borders of the land of promise. All the Israelites who are left in the land.

From Euphrates to the Nile, which were the two borders of the land of promise. All the Israelites who are left in the land.

Wesley: Isa 27:12 - One by one Which signifies, God's exact care of them.

Which signifies, God's exact care of them.

Wesley: Isa 27:13 - Trumpet God shall summon them altogether by sound of trumpet, by an eminent call of his providence. He alludes to the custom of calling the Israelites togethe...

God shall summon them altogether by sound of trumpet, by an eminent call of his providence. He alludes to the custom of calling the Israelites together with trumpets.

JFB: Isa 27:1 - sore Rather, "hard," "well-tempered."

Rather, "hard," "well-tempered."

JFB: Isa 27:1 - leviathan Literally, in Arabic, "the twisted animal," applicable to every great tenant of the waters, sea-serpents, crocodiles, &c. In Eze 29:3; Eze 32:2; Dan 7...

Literally, in Arabic, "the twisted animal," applicable to every great tenant of the waters, sea-serpents, crocodiles, &c. In Eze 29:3; Eze 32:2; Dan 7:1, &c. Rev 12:3, &c., potentates hostile to Israel are similarly described; antitypically and ultimately Satan is intended (Rev 20:10).

JFB: Isa 27:1 - piercing Rigid [LOWTH]. Flying [MAURER and Septuagint]. Long, extended, namely, as the crocodile which cannot readily bend back its body [HOUBIGANT].

Rigid [LOWTH]. Flying [MAURER and Septuagint]. Long, extended, namely, as the crocodile which cannot readily bend back its body [HOUBIGANT].

JFB: Isa 27:1 - crooked Winding.

Winding.

JFB: Isa 27:1 - dragon Hebrew, tenin; the crocodile.

Hebrew, tenin; the crocodile.

JFB: Isa 27:1 - sea The Euphrates, or the expansion of it near Babylon.

The Euphrates, or the expansion of it near Babylon.

JFB: Isa 27:2 - -- In that day when leviathan shall be destroyed, the vineyard (Psa 80:8), the Church of God, purged of its blemishes, shall be lovely in God's eyes; to ...

In that day when leviathan shall be destroyed, the vineyard (Psa 80:8), the Church of God, purged of its blemishes, shall be lovely in God's eyes; to bring out this sense the better, LOWTH, by changing a Hebrew letter, reads "pleasant," "lovely," for "red wine."

JFB: Isa 27:2 - sing A responsive song [LOWTH].

A responsive song [LOWTH].

JFB: Isa 27:2 - unto her Rather, "concerning her" (see on Isa 5:1); namely, the Jewish state [MAURER].

Rather, "concerning her" (see on Isa 5:1); namely, the Jewish state [MAURER].

JFB: Isa 27:3 - lest any hurt it Attack it [MAURER]. "Lest aught be wanting in her" [HORSLEY].

Attack it [MAURER]. "Lest aught be wanting in her" [HORSLEY].

JFB: Isa 27:4 - Fury is not in me That is, I entertain no longer anger towards my vine.

That is, I entertain no longer anger towards my vine.

JFB: Isa 27:4 - who would set . . . in battle That is, would that I had the briers, &c. (the wicked foe; Isa 9:18; Isa 10:17; 2Sa 23:6), before me! "I would go through," or rather, "against them."

That is, would that I had the briers, &c. (the wicked foe; Isa 9:18; Isa 10:17; 2Sa 23:6), before me! "I would go through," or rather, "against them."

JFB: Isa 27:5 - Or Else; the only alternative, if Israel's enemies wish to escape being "burnt together."

Else; the only alternative, if Israel's enemies wish to escape being "burnt together."

JFB: Isa 27:5 - strength Rather, "the refuge which I afford" [MAURER]. "Take hold," refers to the horns of the altar which fugitives often laid hold of as an asylum (1Ki 1:50;...

Rather, "the refuge which I afford" [MAURER]. "Take hold," refers to the horns of the altar which fugitives often laid hold of as an asylum (1Ki 1:50; 1Ki 2:28). Jesus is God's "strength," or "refuge" which sinners must repair to and take hold of, if they are to have "peace" with God (Isa 45:24; Rom 5:1; Eph 2:14; compare Job 22:21).

JFB: Isa 27:6 - He Jehovah. Here the song of the Lord as to His vineyard (Isa 27:2-5) ends; and the prophet confirms the sentiment in the song, under the same image of a...

Jehovah. Here the song of the Lord as to His vineyard (Isa 27:2-5) ends; and the prophet confirms the sentiment in the song, under the same image of a vine (compare Psa 92:13-15; Hos 14:5-6).

JFB: Isa 27:6 - Israel . . . fill . . . world (Rom 11:12).

JFB: Isa 27:7 - him . . . those Israel--Israel's enemies. Has God punished His people as severely as He has those enemies whom He employed to chastise Israel? No! Far from it. Israel...

Israel--Israel's enemies. Has God punished His people as severely as He has those enemies whom He employed to chastise Israel? No! Far from it. Israel, after trials, He will restore; Israel's enemies He will utterly destroy at last.

JFB: Isa 27:7 - the slaughter of them that are slain by him Rather, "Is Israel slain according to the slaughter of the enemy slain?" the slaughter wherewith the enemy is slain [MAURER].

Rather, "Is Israel slain according to the slaughter of the enemy slain?" the slaughter wherewith the enemy is slain [MAURER].

JFB: Isa 27:8 - In measure Not beyond measure; in moderation (Job 23:6; Psa 6:1; Jer 10:24; Jer 30:11; Jer 46:28).

Not beyond measure; in moderation (Job 23:6; Psa 6:1; Jer 10:24; Jer 30:11; Jer 46:28).

JFB: Isa 27:8 - when it shooteth Image from the vine; rather, passing from the image to the thing itself, "when sending her away (namely, Israel to exile; Isa 50:1, God only putting t...

Image from the vine; rather, passing from the image to the thing itself, "when sending her away (namely, Israel to exile; Isa 50:1, God only putting the adulteress away when He might justly have put her to death), Thou didst punish her" [GESENIUS].

JFB: Isa 27:8 - stayeth Rather, as Margin, "when He removeth it by His rough wind in the day," &c.

Rather, as Margin, "when He removeth it by His rough wind in the day," &c.

JFB: Isa 27:8 - east wind Especially violent in the East (Job 27:21; Jer 18:17).

Especially violent in the East (Job 27:21; Jer 18:17).

JFB: Isa 27:9 - By this Exile of Israel (the "sending away," Isa 27:8).

Exile of Israel (the "sending away," Isa 27:8).

JFB: Isa 27:9 - purged Expiated [HORSLEY].

Expiated [HORSLEY].

JFB: Isa 27:9 - all the fruit This is the whole benefit designed to be brought about by the chastisement; namely, the removal of his (Israel's) sin (namely, object of idolatry; Deu...

This is the whole benefit designed to be brought about by the chastisement; namely, the removal of his (Israel's) sin (namely, object of idolatry; Deu 9:21; Hos 10:8).

JFB: Isa 27:9 - when he Jehovah; at the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, His instrument. The Jews ever since have abhorred idolatry (compare Isa 17:8).

Jehovah; at the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, His instrument. The Jews ever since have abhorred idolatry (compare Isa 17:8).

JFB: Isa 27:9 - not stand up Shall rise no more [HORSLEY].

Shall rise no more [HORSLEY].

JFB: Isa 27:10 - city Jerusalem; the beating asunder of whose altars and images was mentioned in Isa 27:9 (compare Isa 24:10-12).

Jerusalem; the beating asunder of whose altars and images was mentioned in Isa 27:9 (compare Isa 24:10-12).

JFB: Isa 27:10 - calf feed (Isa 17:2); it shall be a vast wild pasture.

(Isa 17:2); it shall be a vast wild pasture.

JFB: Isa 27:10 - branches Resuming the image of the vine (Isa 27:2, Isa 27:6).

Resuming the image of the vine (Isa 27:2, Isa 27:6).

JFB: Isa 27:11 - boughs . . . broken off So the Jews are called (Rom 11:17, Rom 11:19-20).

So the Jews are called (Rom 11:17, Rom 11:19-20).

JFB: Isa 27:11 - set . . . on fire Burn them as fuel; "women" are specified, as probably it was their office to collect fuel and kindle the fire for cooking.

Burn them as fuel; "women" are specified, as probably it was their office to collect fuel and kindle the fire for cooking.

JFB: Isa 27:11 - no understanding As to the ways of God (Deu 32:28-29; Jer 5:21; Hos 4:6).

As to the ways of God (Deu 32:28-29; Jer 5:21; Hos 4:6).

JFB: Isa 27:12 - -- Restoration of the Jews from their dispersion, described under the image of fruits shaken from trees and collected.

Restoration of the Jews from their dispersion, described under the image of fruits shaken from trees and collected.

JFB: Isa 27:12 - beat off As fruit beaten off a tree with a stick (Deu 24:20), and then gathered.

As fruit beaten off a tree with a stick (Deu 24:20), and then gathered.

JFB: Isa 27:12 - river Euphrates.

Euphrates.

JFB: Isa 27:12 - stream of Egypt On the confines of Palestine and Egypt (Num 34:5; Jos 15:4, Jos 15:47), now Wady-el-Arish, Jehovah's vineyard, Israel, extended according to His purpo...

On the confines of Palestine and Egypt (Num 34:5; Jos 15:4, Jos 15:47), now Wady-el-Arish, Jehovah's vineyard, Israel, extended according to His purpose from the Nile to the Euphrates (1Ki 4:21, 1Ki 4:24; Psa 72:8).

JFB: Isa 27:12 - one by one Gathered most carefully, not merely as a nation, but as individuals.

Gathered most carefully, not merely as a nation, but as individuals.

JFB: Isa 27:13 - great trumpet Image from the trumpets blown on the first day of the seventh month to summon the people to a holy convocation (Lev 23:24). Antitypically, the gospel ...

Image from the trumpets blown on the first day of the seventh month to summon the people to a holy convocation (Lev 23:24). Antitypically, the gospel trumpet (Rev 11:15; Rev 14:6) which the Jews shall hearken to in the last days (Zec 12:10; Zec 13:1). As the passover in the first month answers to Christ's crucifixion, so the day of atonement and the idea of "salvation" connected with the feast of tabernacles in the same seventh month, answer to the crowning of "redemption" at His second coming; therefore redemption is put last in 1Co 1:30.

JFB: Isa 27:13 - Assyria Whither the ten tribes had been carried; Babylonia is mainly meant, to which Assyria at that time belonged; the two tribes were restored, and some of ...

Whither the ten tribes had been carried; Babylonia is mainly meant, to which Assyria at that time belonged; the two tribes were restored, and some of the ten accompanied them. However, "Assyria" is designedly used to point ultimately to the future restoration of the ten fully, never yet accomplished (Jer 3:18).

JFB: Isa 27:13 - Egypt Whither many had fled at the Babylonish captivity (Jer 41:17-18). Compare as to the future restoration, Isa 11:11-12, Isa 11:16; Isa 51:9-16 ("Rahab" ...

Whither many had fled at the Babylonish captivity (Jer 41:17-18). Compare as to the future restoration, Isa 11:11-12, Isa 11:16; Isa 51:9-16 ("Rahab" being Egypt).

The twenty-eighth through thirty-third chapters form almost one continuous prophecy concerning the destruction of Ephraim, the impiety and folly of Judah, the danger of their league with Egypt, the straits they would be reduced to by Assyria, from which Jehovah would deliver them on their turning to Him; the twenty-eighth chapter refers to the time just before the sixth year of Hezekiak's reign, the rest not very long before his fourteenth year.

Clarke: Isa 27:1 - Leviathan Leviathan - The animals here mentioned seem to be the crocodile, rigid by the stiffness of the backbone, so that he cannot readily turn himself when...

Leviathan - The animals here mentioned seem to be the crocodile, rigid by the stiffness of the backbone, so that he cannot readily turn himself when he pursues his prey; hence the easiest way of escaping from him is by making frequent and short turnings: the serpent or dragon, flexible and winding, which coils himself up in a circular form: and the sea monster, or whale. These are used allegorically, without doubt for great potentates, enemies and persecutors of the people of God: but to specify the particular persons or states designed by the prophet under these images, is a matter of great difficulty, and comes not necessarily with in the design of these notes. R. D. Kimchi says, leviathan is a parable concerning the kings of the Gentiles: it is the largest fish in the sea, called also תנין tannin , the dragon, or rather the whale. By these names the Grecian, Turkish, and Roman empires are intended. The dragon of the sea seems to mean some nation having a strong naval force and extensive commerce. See Kimchi on the place.

Clarke: Isa 27:2 - Sing ye unto her Sing ye unto her - אנו לה anu lah . Bishop Lowth translates this, Sing ye a responsive song; and says that ענה anah , to answer, signifie...

Sing ye unto her - אנו לה anu lah . Bishop Lowth translates this, Sing ye a responsive song; and says that ענה anah , to answer, signifies occasionally to sing responsively; and that this mode of singing was frequently practiced among the ancient Hebrews. See De Poes. Sac. Hebrews Prael. xix., at the beginning

This, indeed, was the ancient method of singing in various nations. The song was divided into distinct portions, and the singers sang alternately. There is a fine specimen of this in the song of Deborah and Barak; and also in the Idyls of Theocritus, and the Eclogues of Virgil

This kind of singing was properly a dialogue in verse, sung to a particular tune, or in the mode which is now termed recitativo . I have seen it often practiced on funeral occasions among the descendants of the aboriginal Irish. The poems of Ossian are of this kind

The learned Bishop distinguishes the parts of this dialogue thus: -

3.    Jehovah. It is I, Jehovah, that preserve her; I will water her every moment: I will take care of her by night; And by day I will keep guard over her

4.    Vineyard. I have no wall for my defense: O that I had a fence of the thorn and brier! Jehovah. Against them should I march in battle, I should burn them up together

5.    Ah! let her rather take hold of my protection. Vineyard. Let him make peace with me! Peace let him make with me

6.    Jehovah. They that come from the root of Jacob shall flourish, Israel shall bud forth; And they shall fill the face of the world with fruit

Clarke: Isa 27:2 - A vineyard of red wine A vineyard of red wine - The redder the wine, the more it was valued, says Kimchi Bishop Lowth translates, To the beloved vineyard. For חמר chem...

A vineyard of red wine - The redder the wine, the more it was valued, says Kimchi

Bishop Lowth translates, To the beloved vineyard. For חמר chemer , red, a multitude of MSS. and editions have חמד chemed , desirable. This is supported by the Septuagint and Chaldee.

Clarke: Isa 27:3 - -- Lest any hurt it, I will keep it night and day - "I will take care of her by night; and by day I will keep guard over her"- For פן יפקד pen y...

Lest any hurt it, I will keep it night and day - "I will take care of her by night; and by day I will keep guard over her"- For פן יפקד pen yiphkod , lest any visit it, the Syriac read ואפקד veephkod , and I will visit it. Twenty MSS. of Kennicott’ s, fourteen of De Rossi’ s, and two of my own, and six editions read אפקד ephkod , I will visit, in the first person.

Clarke: Isa 27:4 - -- Fury is not in me "I have no wall"- For חמה chemah , anger, the Septuagint and Syriac read חומה chomah , wall. An ancient MS. has חימה...

Fury is not in me "I have no wall"- For חמה chemah , anger, the Septuagint and Syriac read חומה chomah , wall. An ancient MS. has חימה cheimah . For בה bad , in her, two MSS. read בם bam , in them, plural. The vineyard wishes for a wall and a fence of thorns - human strength and protection, (as the Jews were too apt to apply to their powerful neighbors for assistance, and to trust to the shadow of Egypt): Jehovah replies, that this would not avail her, nor defend her against his wrath. He counsels her, therefore, to betake herself to his protection. On which she entreats him to make peace with her

From the above note it appears that the bishop reads, חומה chomah , wall, for חמה chemah , anger or fury, in accordance with the Syriac and Septuagint. The letter ו vau makes the only difference, which letter is frequently absent from many words where its place is supplied by the point. cholem : it might have been so here formerly; and in process of time both vau and cholem might have been lost. The Syriac supports the learned bishop’ s criticism, as the word shora is there used; which word in the plural is found, Heb 11:30 : "By faith the walls of Jericho. "The bishop thinks the Septuagint is on his side: to me, it seems neither for nor against the criticism. The words in the Vatican copy are εγω πολις οχυρα, I am a fortified city; which the Arabic follows: but instead of οχυρα, the Codex Alexandrinus has ισχυρα, I am a Strong city

The word חומה chomah , wall, is not found in any MS. in the collections of Kennicott and De Rossi, nor in any of my own MSS

However, one of Dr. Kennicott’ s MSS. has חימה cheimah ; but probably that which now appears to be a י yod was formerly a ו vau , and now partially obliterated

This song receives much light from being collated with that in chap. 5.; and perhaps the bishop’ s criticism will find its best support from such a collation. In Isa 5:5 of that chapter, God threatens to take away the wall of his vineyard: this was done; and here the vineyard complains, I have no wall, and wishes for any kind of defense rather than be thus naked. This is the only natural support of the above criticism

"About Tripoli there are abundance of vineyards and gardens, inclosed, for the most part, with hedges, which chiefly consist of the rhamnus, paliurus, oxyacantha, "etc. Rawolf, p. 21, 22. A fence of thorns is esteemed equal to a wall for strength, being commonly represented as impenetrable. See Mic 7:4; Hos 2:6

Who would set the briers and thorns against me "O that I had a fence of the thorn and brier"- Seven MSS., (two ancient), and one edition, with the Syriac, Vulgate, and Aquila, read ושית veshayith , with the conjunction ו vau prefixed: Who would set the briers and thorns. מי יתנני שמיר שית mi yitteneni shamir shayith , Who shall give me the brier and thorn, i.e., for a defense: but hear Kimchi: "Who (the vineyard) hath given me (Jehovah) the brier and the thorn instead of good grapes."

Clarke: Isa 27:5 - -- Or "Ah"- For או o I read אוי oi , as it was at first in a MS. The י yod was easily lost, being followed by another י yod .

Or "Ah"- For או o I read אוי oi , as it was at first in a MS. The י yod was easily lost, being followed by another י yod .

Clarke: Isa 27:6 - -- To take root "From the root"- For ישרש yashresh , I read, with the Syriac, משרש mishshoresh . And for יציץ ופרח yatsits uparach ...

To take root "From the root"- For ישרש yashresh , I read, with the Syriac, משרש mishshoresh . And for יציץ ופרח yatsits uparach , יציצו פרח yatsitsu parach , joining the ו vau to the first word, and taking that into construction with the first part of the sentence, Israel shall bud forth. I suppose the dialogue to be continued in this verse, which pursues the same image of the allegory, but in the way of metaphor.

Clarke: Isa 27:9 - -- The groves "And if the groves"- ולא velo . Four MSS., two ancient, of Kennicott’ s, and one ancient of my own, with the Septuagint; this m...

The groves "And if the groves"- ולא velo . Four MSS., two ancient, of Kennicott’ s, and one ancient of my own, with the Septuagint; this makes a fuller sense.

Clarke: Isa 27:10 - There shall the calf feed There shall the calf feed - That is, the king of Egypt, says Kimchi.

There shall the calf feed - That is, the king of Egypt, says Kimchi.

Clarke: Isa 27:11 - -- The boughs thereof "Her boughs"- קציריה ketsireyha , MS. and Vulg.; that is, the boughs of the vineyard, referring still to the subject of th...

The boughs thereof "Her boughs"- קציריה ketsireyha , MS. and Vulg.; that is, the boughs of the vineyard, referring still to the subject of the dialogue above

The scarcity of fuel, especially wood, in most parts of the east is so great, that they supply it with every thing capable of burning; cow-dung dried, roots, parings of fruit, withered stalks of herbs and flowers; see Mat 6:21-30. Vine-twigs are particularly mentioned as used for fuel in dressing their food, by D’ Arvieux; La Roque, Palestine, p. 198. Ezekiel says, in his parable of the vine, used figuratively for the people of God, as the vineyard is here: "Shall wood be taken thereof to do any work? or will men take a pin of it to hang any vessel thereon? Behold, it is cast into the fire for fuel; "Eze 15:3, Eze 15:4. "If a man abide not in one, "saith our Lord, "he is cast forth as a branch of the vine and is withered; and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned;"Joh 15:6. They employed women and children to gather these things, and they laid them up in store for use. The dressing and pruning their vines afforded a good supply of the last sort of fuel; but the prophet says that the vines themselves of the beloved vineyard shall be blasted, withered, and broken, and the women shall come and gather them up, and carry away the whole of them to make their fires for domestic uses. See Harmer’ s Observations, vol. i., p. 254, etc.

Clarke: Isa 27:12 - The channel of the river The channel of the river - The river Sabbation, beyond which the Israelites were carried captive. - Kimchi.

The channel of the river - The river Sabbation, beyond which the Israelites were carried captive. - Kimchi.

Clarke: Isa 27:13 - The great trumpet shall be blown The great trumpet shall be blown - Does not this refer to the time spoken of by our Lord, Mat 24:31 : He shall send forth his angels - the preachers...

The great trumpet shall be blown - Does not this refer to the time spoken of by our Lord, Mat 24:31 : He shall send forth his angels - the preachers of his Gospel with a great sound of a trumpet - the earnest invitation to be saved by Jesus Christ; and shall gather his elect - the Jews, his ancient chosen people, from the four winds - from all parts of the habitable globe in which they have been dispersed

In this prophet there are several predictions relative to the conversion of Egypt to the true faith, which have not yet been fulfilled, and which must be fulfilled, for the truth of God cannot fail. Should Egypt ever succeed in casting off the Ottoman yoke, and fully establish its independence, it is most likely that the Gospel of Christ would have a speedy entrance into it; and, according to these prophecies, a wide and permanent diffusion. At present the Mohammedan power is a genuine antichrist. This also the Lord will remove in due time.

Calvin: Isa 27:1 - In that day // On leviathan // On leviathan the piercing serpent, and on leviathan the crooked serpent 1.In that day Here the Prophet speaks in general of the judgment of God, and thus includes the whole of Satan’s kingdom. Having formerly spoken of ...

1.In that day Here the Prophet speaks in general of the judgment of God, and thus includes the whole of Satan’s kingdom. Having formerly spoken of the vengeance of God to be displayed against tyrants and wicked men who have shed innocent blood, he now proceeds farther, and publishes the proclamation of this vengeance.

On leviathan The word “leviathan” is variously interpreted; but in general it simply denotes either a large serpent, or whales and sea-fishes, which approach to the character of monsters on account of their huge size. 189 A1though this description applies to the king of Egypt, yet under one class he intended also to include the other enemies of the Church. For my own part, I have no doubt that he speaks allegorically of Satan and of his whole kingdom, describing him under the figure of some monstrous animal, and at the same time glancing at the crafty wiles by which he glosses over his mischievous designs. In this manner he intended to meet many doubts by which we are continually assailed, when God declares that he will assist us, and when we experience, on the other hand, the strength, craft, and deceitfulness of Satan. Wonderful are the stratagems with which he comes prepared for doing mischief, and dreadful the cruelty which he exercises against the children of God. But the Prophet shews that all this will not prevent the Lord from destroying and overthrowing this kingdom. It is indeed certain that this passage does not relate to Satan himself, but to his agents or instruments, 190 by which he governs his kingdom and annoys the Church of God. Now, though this kingdom is defended by innumerable cunning devices, and is astonishingly powerful, yet the Lord will destroy it.

To convince us of this, the Prophet contrasts with it the Lord’s sword, hard, and great, and strong, by which he will easily slay an enemy that is both strong and crafty. It ought therefore to be observed, that we have continually to do with Satan as with some wild beast, and that the world is the sea in which we sail. We are beset by various wild beasts, which endeavor to upset our ship and sink us to the bottom; and we have no means of defending ourselves and resisting them, if the Lord do not aid us. Accordingly, by this description the Prophet intended to describe the greatness of the danger which threatens us from enemies so powerful and so full of rage and of cunning devices. We should quickly be reduced to the lowest extremity, and should be utterly ruined, did not God oppose and meet them with his invincible power; for by his sword alone can this pernicious kingdom of Satan be destroyed.

But we must observe what he says in the beginning of the verse, In that day. It means that Satan is permitted, for some time, to strengthen and defend his kingdom, but that it will at length be destroyed; as Paul also declares, “God will quickly bruise Satan under your feet.” (Rom 16:20.) By this promise he shews that the time for war is not yet ended, and that we must fight bravely till that enemy be subdued, who, though he has been a hundred times vanquished, ceases not to renew the warfare. We must therefore fight with him continually, and must resist the violent attacks which he makes upon us; but, in order that we may not be discouraged, we must keep our eye on that day when his strong arm shall be broken.

On leviathan the piercing serpent, and on leviathan the crooked serpent The epithets applied to “leviathan” describe, on the one hand, his tricks and wiles, and, on the other hand, his open violence; but at the same time intimate that he is endued with invincible power. Since בריח ( bārīăch) signifies a crowbar, that word denotes metaphorically the power of piercing, either on account of venomous bites or on account of open violence. The second name, עקלתון , ( gnăkāllāthōn,) is derived from the verb עקל , ( gnākăl,) to bend; and hence it comes to be applied to crooked and tortuous foldings.

Calvin: Isa 27:2 - Sing to the vineyard of redness 2.Sing to the vineyard of redness 191 He now shews that all this will promote the salvation of the Church; for the Lord attends to the interests of h...

2.Sing to the vineyard of redness 191 He now shews that all this will promote the salvation of the Church; for the Lord attends to the interests of his people, whom he has taken under his guardianship and protection. In order, therefore, that the Church may be restored, Satan and all his kingdom shall be utterly destroyed. The object of all the vengeance which God takes on his enemies is to shew that he takes care of the Church; and although in this passage the Prophet does not name the Church, he shews plainly enough that he addresses her in this congratulation.

This figure conveys the meaning even more strongly than if he had spoken expressly of the people of Israel; for since the whole excellence of a vineyard depends partly on the soil in which it is planted, and partly on diligent cultivation, if the Church of God is a vineyard, we infer that its excellence is owing to nothing else than the undeserved favor of God and the uninterrupted continuance of his kindness. The same metaphor expresses also God’s astonishing love towards the Church, of which we spoke largely under the fifth chapter. 192

He calls it a vineyard of redness, that is, very excellent; for in Scripture, if we compare various passages, “red wine” denotes excellence. He says that this song may at that time be sung in the Church, and foretells that, though it would in the mean time be reduced to fearful ruin, and would lie desolate and waste, yet that afterwards it will be restored in such a manner as to yield fruit plentifully, and that this will furnish abundant materials for singing.

Calvin: Isa 27:3 - I Jehovah keep it // I will water it every moment 3.I Jehovah keep it Here the Lord asserts his care and diligence in dressing and guarding the vine, as if he had said, that he left nothing undone th...

3.I Jehovah keep it Here the Lord asserts his care and diligence in dressing and guarding the vine, as if he had said, that he left nothing undone that belonged to the duty of a provident and industrious householder. Not only does he testify what he will do, when the time for gladness and congratulation shall arrive, but he relates the blessings which the Jews had already received, that their hope for the future may be increased. Yet we must supply an implied contrast with the intermediate period, during which God appeared to have laid aside all care of it, so that at that time it differed little from a wilderness. This then is the reason why the Lord’s vineyard was plundered and laid waste; it was because the Lord forsook it, and gave it up as a prey to the enemy. Hence we infer that our condition will be ruined as soon as the Lord has departed from us; and if he assist, everything will go well.

I will water it every moment He next mentions two instances of his diligence, that he “will water it every moment,” and will defend it against the attacks of robbers and cattle and other annoyances. These are the two things chiefly required in preserving a vineyard, cultivation and protection. Under the word water he includes all that is necessary for cultivation, and promises that he will neglect nothing that can carry it forward. But protection must likewise be added; for it will be to no purpose to have cultivated a vineyard with vast toil, if robbers and cattle break in and destroy it. The Lord, therefore, promises that he will grant protection, and will not permit it to suffer damage, that the fruits may ripen well, and may be gathered in due season. Though the vine may suffer many attacks, and though enemies and wild beasts may assail it with great violence, God declares that he will interpose to preserve it unhurt and free from all danger. Moreover, since he names a fixed day for singing this song, let us remember that, if at any time he cease to assist us, we ought not entirely to cast away hope; and therefore, if he permit us to be harassed and plundered for a time, still he will at length shew that he has not cast away all care of us.

Calvin: Isa 27:4 - Fury is not in me // I will pass through them in a hostile manner, and utterly consume them 4.Fury is not in me This verse contains excellent consolation; for it expresses the incredible warmth of love which the Lord bears towards his people...

4.Fury is not in me This verse contains excellent consolation; for it expresses the incredible warmth of love which the Lord bears towards his people, though they are of a wicked and rebellious disposition. God assumes, as we shall see, the character of a father who is grievously offended, and who, while he is offended at his son, still more pities him, and is naturally inclined to exercise compassion, because the warmth of his love rises above his anger. In short, he shews that he cannot hate his elect so as not to bear fatherly kindness towards them, even while he visits them with very severe punishments.

Scripture represents God to us in various ways. Sometimes it exhibits him as burning with indignation, and having a terrific aspect, and sometimes as shewing nothing but gentleness and mercy; and the reason of this diversity is, that we are not all capable of enjoying his goodness. Thus he is constrained to be perverse towards the perverse, and holy towards the holy, as David describes him. (Psa 18:25.) He shews himself to us what we suffer him to be, for by our rebelliousness we drive him to severity.

Yet here the Prophet does not speak of all indiscriminately, but only of the Church, whose transgressions he chastises, and whose iniquities he punishes, in such a manner as not to lay aside a father’s affection. This statement must therefore be limited to the Church, so as to denote the relation between God and his chosen people, to whom he cannot manifest himself otherwise than as a Father, while he burns with rage against the reprobate. Thus we see how great is the consolation that is here given; for if we know that God has called us, we may justly conclude that he is not angry with us, and that, having embraced us with a firm and enduring regard, it is impossible that he shall ever deprive us of it. It is indeed certain that at that time God hated many persons who belonged to that nation; but, with respect to their adoption, he declares that he loved them. Now, the more kindly and tenderly that God loved them, so much the more they who provoked his anger by their wickedness were without excuse. This circumstance is undoubtedly intended to aggravate their guilt, that their wickedness constrains him, in some measure, to change his disposition towards them; for, having formerly spoken of his gentleness, he suddenly exclaims, —

“Who shall engage me in battle with the brier and thorn?” or, as some render it, “Who shall set me as a brier and thorn?” Yet it might not be amiss also to read, “Who shall bring against me a brier, that I may meet it as a thorn?” for there is no copulative conjunction between those two words. Yet I willingly adhere to the former opinion, that God wishes to have to deal with thistles or thorns, which he will quickly consume by the fire of his wrath. If any one choose rather to view it as a reproof of those doubts which often arise in us in consequence of unbelief, when we think that God is inflamed with wrath against us, as if he had said, “You are mistaken in comparing me to the brier and thorn,” that is, “You ascribe to me a harsh and cruel disposition,” let him enjoy his opinion, though I think that it is different from what the Prophet means. 193

Others think that God assumes the character of a man who is provoking himself to rage; as if he had said, “I do not choose to be any longer so indulgent, or to exercise such forbearance as I have formerly manifested;” but this is so forced, that it does not need a lengthened refutation. It is true, indeed, that since God is gentle and merciful in his nature, and there is nothing that is more foreign to him than harshness or cruelty, he may be said to borrow a nature that does not belong to him. 194 But the interpretation which I have given will of itself be sufficient to refute others, namely, that God complains bitterly that he will as soon fight with thorns as with his vineyard, for when he considers that it is his inheritances he is compelled to spare it.

I will pass through them in a hostile manner, and utterly consume them These words confirm my former exposition; for the burning relates to “briers and thorns,” and he declares that, if he had to deal with them, he would burn them all up, but that he acts more gently, because it is his vineyard. Hence we infer that, if God is not enraged against us, this must be attributed, not to any merits of men, but to his election, which is of free grace. By these words, מי יתנני , ( mi yittĕnēnī,) “Who shall give me?” he plainly shews that he has just cause for contending with us, and even for destroying us in a hostile manner, were he not restrained by compassion towards his Church; for we would be as thorns and briers, and would be like wicked men, if the Lord did not separate us from them, that we might not perish along with them. If the phrase במלחמה , ( bămmilhāmāh,) in battle, which we have translated “in a hostile manner,” be connected with the question, “Who shall set me?” it will not ill agree with the meaning. 195

Calvin: Isa 27:5 - Will she take hold of my strength? 5.Will she take hold of my strength? או (ō,) is frequently a disjunctive conjunction, 196 and therefore this passage is explained as if the part...

5.Will she take hold of my strength? או (ō,) is frequently a disjunctive conjunction, 196 and therefore this passage is explained as if the particle had been twice used, “ Either let her take hold of my strength, or let her make peace with me;” that is, “If she do not enter into favor with me, she will feel my strength to her great loss.” Others explain it somewhat differently, “Who shall take hold of my strength?” that is, “Who shall restrain me?” But I pass by this interpretation, because I consider it to be too far-fetched. I return to that which is more generally received.

It is supposed that God threatens the Jews in order to try all the ways and methods by which they may be brought back to the right path; for God is laid under a necessity to urge us in various ways, because we are accustomed to abuse his forbearance and goodness. On this account he frequently threatens to punish us for our ingratitude, as Isaiah appears to do in this passage, “If they do not choose to avail themselves of my kindness, and repent, that they may return to favor with me, they shall feel my strength, 197 which I have hitherto restrained.” Yet another meaning equally appropriate might perhaps be drawn from it, as if God exhorted his people to acknowledge his power, which leads them to seek reconciliation; for whence comes that brutish indifference which makes us view without alarm the wrath of God, but because we do not think of his power with due reverence?

But I prefer to view it as a question, as in other passages also it frequently has this meaning. 198 “Will he take hold of my strength, so as to enter into peace with me?” As if a father, anxious and perplexed about his son, were to groan and complain, “Will not this scoundrel 199 allow himself to receive benefit? for I know not how I ought to treat him; he cannot endure severity, and he abuses my goodness. What shall I do? I will banish him till he repent, and then he will feel how great is that fatherly power by which I have hitherto preserved him. Since he does not permit me to exercise forbearance, he must be treated with the utmost rigour of the law. Will he not then perceive how great my power is, that he may come into a state of favor with me?” We shall understand this better, if we consider that the source of all our distresses is, that we are not affected with a sense of the divine goodness; for if we should take into consideration the greatness of the blessings which we have received from God, we should quickly be drawn aside from our iniquities and transgressions, and should desire to return into a state of favor with him.

Here we see what care about our salvation is manifested by our Heavenly Father, who wishes us to take hold of his power and goodness, that we may know how great it is, and may partake of it more and more abundantly; for he would wish to deal with us on the same familiar terms as with his children, if we did not prevent him by our wickedness. Since, therefore, we are incapable of enjoying his fatherly tenderness, he must display his strength and majesty, that, being awed by it, and affected by the anticipation of the judgment, we may humbly entreat him, and sincerely implore peace and pardon. Now, this is done when we are truly 200 converted to him; for, so long as we please ourselves, and flatter our vices, we cannot but displease him; and, on the other hand, if we enter into peace with him, we must make war against Satan and sin.

How earnestly God desires to be reconciled to us appears still more clearly from the repetition of the words. He might have said, in a single word, that he is merciful and ready to bestow pardon; and therefore, when he twice repeats the words, that he may make peace with me, he declares that willingly and most earnestly he hastens to blot out all our offenses.

Calvin: Isa 27:6 - Afterwards // Jacob shall again put forth roots // And the face of the world shall be filled with fruit 6.Afterwards 201 shall Jacob put forth roots. He now gives actual proof of that love of which he formerly spoke. In order to understand it better, ...

6.Afterwards 201 shall Jacob put forth roots. He now gives actual proof of that love of which he formerly spoke. In order to understand it better, we must consider the condition of that ancient people; for it was the heritage of God, not through its own merits, but by the blessing of adoption. The Lord might justly have been offended at that nation to such an extent as to destroy it utterly, and blot out its name; but he refrained from exercising such severity, because he had to deal with his vineyard and heritage. He aimed at nothing more than that the people should acknowledge their guilt and return to his favor; and therefore he followed up the former statement with this promise, lest the people, struck with excessive terror at that power which exhibits the judgments of God and his chastisements and stripes, should grow disheartened; for the contemplation of the judgment of God might throw us into despair, if we did not entertain some hope of being restored. Accordingly, he says —

Jacob shall again put forth roots “Though I shall lessen my Church, and reduce it to a very small number, yet it shall be restored to its ancient and flourishing condition, so as to fill the whole world; for, after having once been reconciled, it will be more and more increased.” This metaphor borrowed from roots is highly elegant; for by the wrath of the Lord we are as it were cut off, so that we appear to be completely slain and dead; but to whatever extent the Lord afflicts his Church, he never allows the roots to die, but they are concealed for a time, and at length bring forth their fruit.

And the face of the world shall be filled with fruit What he now says, that “the world shall be filled with the fruit” of those roots, was accomplished at the coming of Christ, who collected and multiplied the people of God by the gospel; and Israel was united with the Gentiles in one body, so that the distinction which formerly existed between them was removed. (Eph 2:14.) Now, we know that the gospel, and all the fruit that sprung from it, proceeded from the Jews. (Isa 2:3; Joh 4:22.)

Calvin: Isa 27:7 - Hath he smitten him? 7.Hath he smitten him? 202 He confirms the former statement, and shews that, even in chastisements, there are certain and manifest proofs of the good...

7.Hath he smitten him? 202 He confirms the former statement, and shews that, even in chastisements, there are certain and manifest proofs of the goodness and mercy of God; for while the Lord chastises his people, he moderates the severity in such a manner as always to leave some room for compassion. There are various ways of explaining this verse. Some interpret it thus: “Did I smite Israel as his enemies smote him? The Assyrians did not at all spare him: they acted towards him with the utmost cruelty. But I laid a restraint on my wrath, and did not smite as if I wished to destroy him; and thus I gave abundant evidence that I am not his enemy.” But I prefer another and commonly received interpretation, which leads us to understand that a difference between believers and the reprobate is here declared; for God punishes both indiscriminately, but not in the same manner. When he takes vengeance on the reprobate, he gives loose reins to his anger; because he has no other object in view than to destroy them; for they are “vessels of wrath, appointed to destruction,” (Rom 9:22,) and have no experience of the goodness of God. But when he chastises the godly, he restrains his wrath, and has another and totally different object in view; for he wishes to bring them back to the right path, and to draw them to himself, that provision may be made for their future happiness.

But it may be asked, Why does the Prophet employ a circuitous mode of expression, and say, “according to the stroke of him that smote him?” I answer, he did so, because the Lord often employs the agency of wicked men in chastising us, in order to depress and humble us the more. It is often a very sore temptation to us, when the Lord permits us to be oppressed by the tyranny of wicked men; for we have doubts whether it is because he favors them, or because he deprives us of his assistance, as if he hated us. To meet this doubt, he says that he does indeed permit wicked men to afflict his people, and to exercise their cruelty upon them for a time, but that he will at length punish them for their wickedness more sharply than they punished the godly persons. Yet, if any one choose to adopt the former interpretation, namely, that the Lord will not deal with us as with enemies, I have no objection. Hence arises also that saying, that “it is better to fall into the hands of God than into the hands of men;” for the Lord can never forget his covenant, that he will deal in a gentle and fatherly manner with his Church. (2Sa 24:14; 1Ch 21:13.)

Calvin: Isa 27:8 - In measure // In her shooting forth, // Though he blow with his violent wind // In the day of the east wind 8.In measure This is the second proof of the divine compassion towards all the elect, whom he chastises for this purpose, that they may not perish; a...

8.In measure This is the second proof of the divine compassion towards all the elect, whom he chastises for this purpose, that they may not perish; and, by mitigating the punishments which he inflicts upon them, he pays such regard to their weakness that he never permits them to be oppressed beyond measure. As to the word בסאסאה , ( bĕsăssĕāh,) in measure, all interpreters agree that it denotes moderation; for otherwise we could not bear the hand of the Lord, and would be overwhelmed by it; but he keeps it back, and “is faithful,” as Paul says,

“not to suffer us to be tempted beyond what we are able to bear.”
(1Co 10:13.)

Thus also Jeremiah prays to the Lord to “chastise him in judgment,” that is, with moderation, accommodating the stripes to his weakness. (Jer 10:24.)

In her shooting forth, בשלחה , ( bĕshāllĕchāch.) Interpreters are not agreed as to the meaning of this word. Some think that it means, “by engaging them in internal wars with each other,” and others, “that God will punish their sins by that sword which they have drawn and put into his hand.” But as I cannot approve of either of those interpretations, I pass them by. I approve more highly of those who interpret it, “in her shootings forth,” that is, in plants; so as to mean, that in inflicting punishment, the Lord attacks not only their outward circumstances, but also their persons. We know that the Lord’s chastisements are various. The more light and moderate are those by which he takes from us only external blessings, which are called “the good things of fortune.” So then God punishes believers in such a manner as not only to afflict their persons, but to take from them what is necessary for the support of life, such as corn, wine, oil, and other things of that kind which the earth produces; for שלח ( shālăch) signifies to “shoot forth,” and to “produce.”

But I have another exposition which comes nearer to the Prophet’s meaning, that in shooting forth God contends with the Church, because, though he cuts down the branches and even the trunk, yet his wrath does not extend to the roots, so as to prevent the tree from again shooting forth; for there is always some remaining vigor in the roots, which he never permits to die. And this agrees with what goes before, when he promised (Isa 27:6) that Israel would bring forth “fruit.” This explains what he formerly said, in measure; namely, that he will not pull up the root; for the Lord cuts down what appears outwardly, such as branches and leaves, but defends the root and preserves it safe. But, on the other hand, he tears up the reprobate by the roots, and cuts them down in such a manner that they can never rise again.

Though he blow with his violent wind Some translate it, “he blew with his wind,” but I think that the meaning is made more clear by saying, “though he blow.” He continues the metaphor, by which he had alluded to herbs and plants, which a violent wind causes to wither, but only in appearance; for the root is always safe. Thus though the Lord attacks believers with great violence, and takes away all their beauty and comeliness, so that they appear to be entirely slain, yet he usually preserves in them some internal vigor.

In the day of the east wind When the Prophet spoke of “the day of the east wind,” he had his eye on the situation of Judea, to which, as we learn from other passages, that easterly wind was injurious. We know that each country has its own particular wind that is injurious to it; for in some countries the north wind, in others the south wind, and in others the east or equinoctial wind, occasions great damage, throwing down the corn, scorching or spoiling all the fruits, blasting the trees, and scarcely leaving anything in the fields uninjured. By “the east wind” in this passage, is supposed to be meant “the equinoctial wind,” which in many countries is very destructive.

Calvin: Isa 27:9 - Therefore in this manner shall the iniquity of Jacob be expiated // And this is all the fruit, the taking away of his sin // When he shall have made all the stones of the altar // That groves and images may never rise again 9.Therefore in this manner shall the iniquity of Jacob be expiated After having spoken of the chastisement of the people, he begins to state more cle...

9.Therefore in this manner shall the iniquity of Jacob be expiated After having spoken of the chastisement of the people, he begins to state more clearly that the Lord promotes the interests of his people by these chastisements, so that they derive benefit from them. He had mentioned this formerly, but now he explains it more fully, that all the chastisements which God inflicts will tend to wash away the sins of his people, that thus they may be reconciled to God.

A question arises, Are our sins expiated by the stripes with which God chastises us? For if it be so, it follows that we must satisfy God for our sins, as the Papists teach. These two things are closely connected. If God punish us for our sins in order to expiate them, when punishments are not inflicted, satisfactions must come in their room. But this difficulty will be easily removed, if we consider that here the Prophet does not handle the question, whether we deserve the forgiveness of sins on account of our works, or whether the punishments which God inflicts on us may be regarded as making amends for them. He simply shews that chastisements are the remedies by which God cures our diseases, because we are wont to abuse his goodness and patience. God must therefore bring us to acknowledgment of our sins, and to patience; and thus the punishments which he inflicts as chastisements for our sins are remedies, because our desires may be said to be consumed by them as by fire, 203 to which also Scripture frequently compares them. (Psa 66:10.) In no respect can they yield satisfaction, but men are prepared by them for repentance. Hence he shews, therefore, that the godly have no reason for exclaiming against God’s chastisements, and that they ought to acknowledge, on the contrary, that their salvation is thus promoted, because otherwise they would not acknowledge the grace of God. If any person wish to have a short reply, we may state it in a single word, that chastisements expiate our offenses indirectly, but not directly, because they lead us to repentance, which again, in its turn, brings us to obtain the forgiveness of sins.

And this is all the fruit, the taking away of his sin Some render it in the genitive case, “the fruit of the taking away of his sin;” but I prefer to read it in the nominative case. כל , ( chōl,) all, frequently means, “great and abundant;” and therefore it denotes the plentiful fruit by which the chastisements will be followed. In a word, he intends to commend to us God’s chastisements on the ground of their usefulness, that the godly may bear them with calmness and moderation, when they know that by means of them they are purged and prepared for salvation. 204 And immediately afterwards the Prophet explains his meaning more clearly by speaking of abolishing superstitions. So long as the people of Israel enjoyed prosperity, they did not think of repentance; for it is natural to men that prosperity should make them insolent and harden them more and more. He therefore shews how, in chastising his people, God also takes away their sin, because, having formerly indulged in wickedness and proceeded to greater lengths in sinning in consequence of his goodness and forbearance, they shall now know that they were justly punished, and shall change their life and conduct.

When he shall have made all the stones of the altar Here Isaiah, by a figure of speech, exhibits a single class, so as to explain the whole by means of a part, and describes in general terms the removal of idolatry and superstitions; for he does not speak of the altar which was consecrated to God, but of that which they had erected to their idols. Thus, when the stones of it shall have been broken, and the idols thrown down and destroyed, so that no trace of superstition shall be seen, the iniquity of the people shall at the same time be removed.

Hence it ought to be remarked, first, that we ought not to expect pardon from the Lord, unless we likewise repent of our sins; for whosoever flatters himself must be the object of the anger of God, 205 whom he does not cease to provoke, and our iniquity is taken away only when we are moved by a true feeling of repentance. Secondly, it ought to be observed, that though repentance is an inward feeling of the heart, yet it brings forth its fruits before men. In vain do we profess that we fear God, if we do not give evidence of it by outward works; for the root cannot be separated from its fruits. Thirdly, it ought to be inferred, that idolatry is chiefly mentioned here, because it is the source of all evils. So long as the pure worship of God and the true religion are maintained, there is also room for the duties of brotherly kindness, which necessarily flow from it; but when we forsake God, he permits us also to fall into every kind of vices. And this is the reason why, under the name of idolatry, he includes likewise other acts of wickedness. Besides, we see that he condemns not only statues and images, but everything that had been invented by the Jews contrary to the injunction of the law; and hence it follows that he sets aside every kind of false worship.

That groves and images may never rise again By adding this, he shews how strongly God abhors idolatry, the remembrance of which he wishes to be completely blotted out, so that not even a trace of it shall henceforth be seen. Yet the Prophet intended to express something more, namely, that our repentance ought to be of such a kind that we shall steadfastly persevere in it; for we will not say that it is true repentance, if any one, through a sudden impulse of feeling, shall put down superstitions, and afterwards shall gradually allow them to spring up and bud forth; as we see to be the case with many who at first burn with some appearance of zeal, and afterwards grow cold. But here the Prophet describes such steadfastness that they who have once laid aside their filth and pollution maintain their purity to the end.

Calvin: Isa 27:10 - Yet the defenced city shall be desolate // There shall the calf feed // And shall browse on its tops 10.Yet the defenced city shall be desolate Here the copulative ו ( vau) is generally supposed to mean for, and some take it for otherwise. There...

10.Yet the defenced city shall be desolate Here the copulative ו ( vau) is generally supposed to mean for, and some take it for otherwise. There will thus be a twofold interpretation; for if we translate it because, the Prophet will assign a reason for the former statement, but that exposition is rejected by the context, and is altogether absurd. With greater plausibility it is taken for otherwise; for this threatening might be appropriately introduced, “If you do not repent, you see what awaits you, the defenced city shall be like a wilderness.” But I consider that exposition to be a departure from the natural meaning, and therefore I choose rather to take it as signifying nevertheless or yet

The Prophet means that Jerusalem and the other cities of Judea must “nevertheless” be destroyed, and that, although the Lord wishes to spare his people, it is impossible for them to be preserved. Godly men would have grown disheartened, when they saw that holy city overthrown and the temple demolished; but from these predictions they learned that God would have abundance of methods for preserving the Church, and were supported by that consolation. So then the Prophet intended to meet this very sore temptation; and hence also we learn that we ought never to lose courage, though we suffer every hardship, and though the Lord treat us with the utmost severity. Although this threatening extends to the whole of Judea, yet I think it probable that it relates chiefly to Jerusalem, which was the metropolis of the nation.

There shall the calf feed This metaphor is frequently employed by the prophets when they speak of the desolation of any city; for they immediately add, that it will be a place for pasture. Here we ought to take into account the judgment of God, which places calves and brute beasts in the room of the Jews who had profaned the land by their crimes. Having been adopted by God to be his children, with good reason ought they to have obeyed so kind a Father; but since they had shaken off the yoke and given themselves up to wickedness, it was the just reward of their ingratitude, that the land should be possessed by better inhabitants, taken not from the human race but from brute beasts.

And shall browse on its tops 206 What he says about the “tops” tends to shew more strongly the desolation; as if he had said that there will be such abundance of grass that the calves will crop none but the tender parts. סעף ( sāīph) signifies also branch; but as branches naturally rise high, I take it here for summit or top. It might also be thought that there is an allusion to the beauty of the city, and that as its houses formerly were lofty and magnificent, when these have been thrown down, nothing will be seen in it but herbs and leaves, the “tops” of which the calves which enjoy abundant pasture will eat in disdain.

Calvin: Isa 27:11 - When its harvest shall wither // The women coming shall burn it // For it is a people of no understanding // Therefore their Maker will not have compassion on them 11.When its harvest shall wither 207 Some think that the Prophet has in his eye the metaphor of a vineyard, which he employed at the beginning of the...

11.When its harvest shall wither 207 Some think that the Prophet has in his eye the metaphor of a vineyard, which he employed at the beginning of the chapter, and therefore they translate קציר ( kātzīr,) branches. The word is certainly ambiguous; but as קציר ( kātzīr) means also a harvest, and as the metaphor of a harvest is more appropriate, I prefer to take it in that sense. Nor do I translate it, “When the harvest shall be withered,” but “When the harvest shall wither.” In this passage wither means nothing else than to approach to maturity. Before the harvest of the land is ripe, it shall be cut down; as if he had said, “The Lord will take away from thee the produce which thou thoughest to be already prepared for thee and to be in thy hand.”

The women coming shall burn it When he says that “women shall come,” he means that God will have no need of robust soldiers to execute his judgment, and that he will only make use of the agency of women. This exhibits in a still stronger light the disgracefulness of the punishment, for he threatens that the calamity shall also be accompanied by disgrace; because it is more shameful and humiliating to be plundered by “women,” who are unused to war, than by men.

For it is a people of no understanding At length he assigns the reason of so heavy a calamity. At first sight it might appear to be excessively harsh that the Lord should permit the people whom he had chosen to be wretchedly tormented and scattered, and not to render them any assistance; for it is inconsistent with his kindness and fatherly love which he bears towards them. But the Prophet shews that God had good reason for punishing the Jews with such severity; for they were destitute of knowledge and sound “understanding.”

Nor is it without reason that he pronounces ignorance to have been the source of all evils; for since “the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom,” (Pro 1:7; Psa 111:10,) they who despise God and obey the wicked passions of their flesh are justly condemned by the Spirit of God as blind and mad. And yet such ignorance does not at all excuse us or lessen the guilt of our wickedness; for they who sin are conscious of their sinfulness, though they are blinded by their lust. Wickedness and ignorance are therefore closely connected, but the connection is of such a nature that ignorance proceeds from the sinful disposition of the mind. Hence it comes that “ignorance,” or “ignorances,” is the general name given by the Hebrew writers to every kind of sin, and hence also that saying of Moses,

“O that they were wise and understood!”
(Deu 32:29.)

Any man will easily perceive this, if he consider how great is the power of evil passions to trouble us; for when we have been deprived of the light of doctrine, and are void of understanding, the devil drives us as it were to madness, so that we do not dread the arm of God, and have no respect for his holy word.

Therefore their Maker will not have compassion on them For the purpose of still heightening their terror, he at length takes away all hope of pardon; for even if a remnant was preserved, the wrath of God did not on that account cease to rage against the multitude at large. The Prophet here calls God the Maker and Creator of Israel, not in the same manner that he is called the Creator of heaven and earth, (Gen 1:1,) but inasmuch as he has formed his Church by the Spirit of regeneration. In like manner Paul also declares, that in that sense we are αὐτοῦ ποίημα, his workmanship, (Eph 2:10,) as we have already stated in the exposition of another passage. 208 (Isa 19:25.) Isaiah made this statement, in order to exhibit more strongly the ingratitude of the people, and to shew how justly they deserve to be punished, since, after having been formed and preserved by God, they treated him with dishonor and contempt.

Calvin: Isa 27:12 - And yet it shall come to pass on that day // That Jehovah shall thrash // From the channel of the river to the river of Egypt // And you shall be gathered one by one 12.And yet it shall come to pass on that day He softens the harshness of the former statement; for it was a dreadful judgment of God, that the people...

12.And yet it shall come to pass on that day He softens the harshness of the former statement; for it was a dreadful judgment of God, that the people were deprived of all hope of mercy and favor. The particle ו ( vau) must therefore be explained as in the tenth verse, “ Nevertheless, or, and yet it shall come to pass on that day.”

That Jehovah shall thrash The Prophet speaks metaphorically; for he compares the gathering of the Church to the “thrashing” of wheat, by which the grain is separated from the chaff. The meaning of the metaphor is, that the people were so completely overwhelmed by that captivity that they appeared to be nothing else than grain concealed or scattered here and there under the chaff. It was necessary that the Lord should “thrash,” as with a fan, what was concealed amidst the confused mass; so that this gathering was justly compared to “thrashing.”

From the channel of the river to the river of Egypt By this he means Euphrates and the Nile; for the people were banished, partly into Chaldea or Assyria, and partly into Egypt. Many fled into Egypt, while others were carried captive into Babylon. He therefore foretells that the Lord will gather his people, not only from Chaldea, and from the whole of Mesopotamia, but also from Egypt.

And you shall be gathered one by one לאחד אחד , ( lĕăhăd ĕ hād,) which we have translated “one by one,” is translated by others “each out of each place;” but this is an excessively forced exposition, and the exposition which I have stated appears to me more simple. Yet there are two senses which the words will bear; either, “I will gather you into one body,” or “I will gather you, not in companies nor in great numbers, but one after another,” as usually happens when men who had wandered and been scattered are gathered; for they do not all assemble suddenly, but approach to each other by degrees. The Jews were scattered and dispersed in such a manner that they could not easily be gathered together and formed into one body; and therefore he shews that this dispersion will not prevent them from being restored to a flourishing condition. This was afterwards fulfilled; for the Jews were gathered and brought back, not by a multitude of horsemen or chariots, not by human forces, or swords, or arms, as Hosea states, but solely by the power of God. (Hos 1:7.)

Calvin: Isa 27:13 - It shall also come to pass in that day // And they shall come who were perishing // And who had been scattered in the land of Egypt // And shall worship Jehovah in the holy mountain 13.It shall also come to pass in that day This is the explanation of the former verse. He speaks metaphorically, and shews that so great will be the ...

13.It shall also come to pass in that day This is the explanation of the former verse. He speaks metaphorically, and shews that so great will be the power of God, that he will easily bring back his people. As kings assemble large armies by the sound of a trumpet, so he shews that it will be easy for the Lord to gather his people, on whom prophecy had not less efficacy than the trumpet by which soldiers are mustered.

And they shall come who were perishing He calls them perishing, because they were miserably scattered, and appeared to be very near destruction, without any hope of being restored. The enemies, while their monarchy lasted, would never have permitted their captives to return, nor had they led them into banishment in a distant country with any other design than that of gradually casting into oblivion the name of Israel.

And who had been scattered in the land of Egypt What he adds about Egypt contains a more remarkable testimony of pardon, namely, that those who fled into Egypt, though they did not deserve this favor, shall be gathered. They had offended God in two respects, as Jeremiah plainly shews; first, because they were obstinate and rebellious; and, secondly, because they had refused to obey the revelation, (Jer 28:10;) for they ought to have submitted to the yoke of the Babylonians rather than flee into Egypt in opposition to the command of God.

And shall worship Jehovah in the holy mountain At length, he describes the result of their deliverance, that the Jews, having returned from captivity into their country, may again worship God their deliverer in a pure and lawful manner. By the mountain he means the temple and sacrifices. This was indeed accomplished under Darius, but the Prophet undoubtedly intended to extend this prophecy farther; for that restoration was a kind of dark foreshadowing of the deliverance which they obtained through Christ, at whose coming the sound of the spiritual trumpet, that is, of the gospel, was heard, not only in Assyria or Egypt, but in the most distant parts of the world. Then were the people of God gathered, to flow together to Mount Zion, that is, to the Church. We know that this mode of expression is frequently employed by the prophets when they intend to denote the true worship of God, and harmony in religion and godliness; for they accommodated themselves to the usages of the people that they might be better understood. We know also that the gospel proceeded out of Zion; but on this subject we have spoken fully at the second chapter. 209

Defender: Isa 27:1 - leviathan "Leviathan" is here also called "the dragon." The references to "leviathan" in Psa 74:13, Psa 74:14; Psa 104:26; and Job 41:1-34 make it clear that th...

"Leviathan" is here also called "the dragon." The references to "leviathan" in Psa 74:13, Psa 74:14; Psa 104:26; and Job 41:1-34 make it clear that this was a real animal, probably a fearsome marine reptile, like a dinosaur. This passage, as well as Psa 74:13, Psa 74:14, shows that the many references to "dragons" in the Bible (Hebrew tannin) must refer to great monsters, now extinct, such as dinosaurs. Only the false idea of the supposed evolutionary ages of geology says that dinosaurs became extinct seventy million years before man evolved.

Defender: Isa 27:1 - that crooked serpent Leviathan, though a real animal, also symbolizes that old serpent, the devil, who will indeed be judged "in that day," first bound in "the bottomless ...

Leviathan, though a real animal, also symbolizes that old serpent, the devil, who will indeed be judged "in that day," first bound in "the bottomless pit," later consigned forever to "the lake of fire" (Rev 20:2, Rev 20:10).

Defender: Isa 27:1 - dragon The "dragon that is in the sea," actually a marine dinosaur-like reptile (called a plesiosaur today), here symbolizes both Satan and the Beast of the ...

The "dragon that is in the sea," actually a marine dinosaur-like reptile (called a plesiosaur today), here symbolizes both Satan and the Beast of the end-times (Rev 12:3, Rev 12:9; Rev 13:1, Rev 13:2). The Beast, the Man of sin, is energized and possessed by Satan. Both will be destroyed "in that day.""

TSK: Isa 27:1 - that day // with his // leviathan // piercing // crooked // the dragon // in the sea that day : Isa 26:21 with his : Isa 34:5, Isa 34:6, Isa 66:16; Deu 32:41, Deu 32:42; Job 40:19; Psa 45:3; Jer 47:6; Rev 2:16; Rev 19:21 leviathan : Jo...

TSK: Isa 27:2 - sing // A vineyard sing : Isa 5:1-7; Num 21:17 A vineyard : Psa 80:8-19; Jer 2:21; Mat 21:33-46; Luk 20:9-18

TSK: Isa 27:3 - I the // do keep // water I the : Isa 46:4, Isa 46:9, Isa 60:16; Gen 6:17, Gen 9:9; Eze 34:11, Eze 34:24, Eze 37:14, Eze 37:28 do keep : Deu 33:26-29; 1Sa 2:9; Psa 46:5, Psa 46...

TSK: Isa 27:4 - Fury // who would // go through Fury : Isa 12:1, Isa 26:20,Isa 26:21, Isa 54:6-10; Psa 85:3, Psa 103:9; Eze 16:63; Nah 1:3-7; 2Pe 2:9 who would : Isa 9:18, Isa 10:17; 2Sa 23:6; Mal 4...

TSK: Isa 27:5 - let him // and he let him : Isa 25:4, Isa 26:3, Isa 26:4, Isa 45:24, Isa 56:2, Isa 64:7; Jos 9:24, Jos 9:25, Jos 10:6; Job 22:21; Luk 13:34, Luk 14:32, Luk 19:42; Heb 6...

TSK: Isa 27:6 - -- Isa 6:13, Isa 37:31, Isa 49:20-23, Isa 54:1-3, Isa 60:22; Psa 92:13-15; Jer 30:19; Hos 2:23, Hos 14:5, Hos 14:6; Zec 2:11, Zec 10:8, Zec 10:9; Rom 11:...

TSK: Isa 27:7 - he smitten // as he smote he smitten : Isa 10:20-25, Isa 14:22, Isa 14:23, Isa 17:3, Isa 17:14; Jer 30:11-16, Jer 50:33, Jer 50:34, Jer 50:40, Jer 51:24; Dan 2:31-35; Nah 1:14,...

he smitten : Isa 10:20-25, Isa 14:22, Isa 14:23, Isa 17:3, Isa 17:14; Jer 30:11-16, Jer 50:33, Jer 50:34, Jer 50:40, Jer 51:24; Dan 2:31-35; Nah 1:14, Nah 3:19

as he smote : Heb. according to the stroke of

TSK: Isa 27:8 - measure // it shooteth forth // thou wilt // he stayeth // his rough measure : Isa 57:16; Job 23:6; Psa 6:1, Psa 38:1, Psa 103:14; Jer 10:24, Jer 30:11, Jer 46:28; 1Co 10:13; 1Pe 1:6 it shooteth forth : or, thou sendest...

measure : Isa 57:16; Job 23:6; Psa 6:1, Psa 38:1, Psa 103:14; Jer 10:24, Jer 30:11, Jer 46:28; 1Co 10:13; 1Pe 1:6

it shooteth forth : or, thou sendest it forth

thou wilt : Isa 1:5, Isa 1:18-20, Isa 5:3, Isa 5:4; Jdg 10:10-16; Jer. 2:17-37; Hos 4:1, Hos 6:1, Hos 6:2; Hos 11:7-9; Mic 6:2-5

he stayeth : etc. or, when he removeth it

his rough : Isa 10:5, Isa 10:6, Isa 10:12; Psa 76:10, Psa 78:38; Jer 4:11, Jer 4:27; Eze 19:12; Hos 13:15

TSK: Isa 27:9 - this therefore // when // the groves // images this therefore : Isa 1:24, Isa 1:25, Isa 4:4, Isa 48:10; Psa 119:67, Psa 119:71; Pro 20:30 *marg. Eze 20:38, Eze 24:13; Dan 11:35; Mal 3:2, Mal 3:3; 1...

TSK: Isa 27:10 - the defenced // there shall the the defenced : Isa 5:9, Isa 5:10, Isa 6:11, Isa 6:12, Isa 17:9, Isa 25:2, Isa 64:10; Jer 26:6, Jer 26:18; Lam 1:4, Lam 2:5-9; Lam 5:18; Eze 36:4; Mic ...

TSK: Isa 27:11 - the boughs // for it is // therefore the boughs : Psa 80:15, Psa 80:16; Eze 15:2-8, Eze 20:47; Mat 3:10; Joh 15:6 for it is : Isa 1:3, Isa 44:18-20; Deu 4:6, Deu 32:28, Deu 32:29; Jer 4:2...

TSK: Isa 27:12 - beat off // ye shall be beat off : Isa 11:11-16, Isa 24:13-16, Isa 56:8; Gen 15:18; Psa 68:22, Psa 72:8 ye shall be : Deu 30:3, Deu 30:4; Neh 1:9; Jer 3:14; Amo 9:9; Mat 18:1...

TSK: Isa 27:13 - And it // the great // and they // the outcasts // and shall And it : Isa 2:11 the great : Isa 18:3; Lev 25:9; Num 10:2-4; 1Ch 15:24; Psa 47:5, Psa 81:3, Psa 89:15; Zec 9:13-16; Mat 24:31; Luk 4:18; Rom 10:18; 1...

kecilkan semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Kata/Frasa (per Ayat)

Poole: Isa 27:1 - Shall punish leviathan // The piercing serpent // That crooked serpent // The dragon // that is in the sea Shall punish leviathan what kind of creature the leviathan is, See Poole "Job 41:1" , &c.; whence it is evident that it was a very great and terrib...

Shall punish leviathan what kind of creature the leviathan is, See Poole "Job 41:1" , &c.; whence it is evident that it was a very great and terrible sea-monster. But here it is certain that the expression is metaphorical, and that by this leviathan, serpent , and dragon (for all signify the same thing) he understands some very powerful enemy or enemies (for the singular number may be here put for the plural, as it is in many other places) of God, and of his church or people, which may well be called by these names, partly for their great might, and partly for the great terror and destruction which they cause upon the earth, as the leviathan doth in the sea. He seems to have a special respect to some particular enemy and oppressor of God’ s people; either the Assyrian emperor, who now was so; or rather the Babylonian, who should be so. Some understand this of the devil; but although it may be applied to him in a mystical sense, it seems to be literally meant of some potent and visible adversary; which seems more agreeable to the following verses, and to the usage of this and other prophets.

The piercing serpent which by its sting pierceth quickly and deeply into men’ s bodies. Or, the bar (as this word is elsewhere used) serpent , as this may be called, either for its length, or strength, or swift motion.

That crooked serpent winding and turning itself with great variety and dexterity; whereby he seems to signify the craftiness and activity of this enemy, which being added to his strength makes it more formidable.

The dragon or rather, the whale , as this word is rendered, Gen 1:21 Job 7:12 , and elsewhere; which agrees better with the following words,

that is in the sea which possibly were added only to limit that general and ambiguous word to a sea-monster, and not to describe the place in which the enemy signified by this dragon had his abode. Although the sea , which here follows, may be metaphorically understood of the great largeness of his empire, and the multitude of his subjects, by comparing this with Rev 17:1,15 .

Poole: Isa 27:2 - In that day In that day when this potent enemy shall be destroyed

In that day when this potent enemy shall be destroyed

Poole: Isa 27:3 - I the Lord do keep it I the Lord do keep it I will secure it, that neither men, nor beasts, nor drought shall spoil it; which alone are the things that can hurt it. I will...

I the Lord do keep it I will secure it, that neither men, nor beasts, nor drought shall spoil it; which alone are the things that can hurt it. I will protect my church from all the assaults of her enemies, and supply her with all necessary provisions, with my ordinances, and with my Spirit and grace.

Poole: Isa 27:4 - Fury // I would go through them, I would burn them together Fury to wit, against my vineyard, or my people; which is easily understood both from the foregoing and following verses. I have been displeased with ...

Fury to wit, against my vineyard, or my people; which is easily understood both from the foregoing and following verses. I have been displeased with them, and have chastised them; but I am not implacable towards them, and resolved utterly to destroy them, as their enemies are, and would have me to be.

I would go through them, I would burn them together: this is added as a reason of the foregoing clause and assertion; which may be conceived either,

1. Thus, I rather desire to contend with briers and thorns, i.e. with the wicked enemies of my church, who are thus called, Isa 10:17 Eze 28:24 ; and if my wrath was now kindled against them, as it is against my people, I would be furious towards them, and never leave till I had utterly consumed them; but I will deal more indulgently with my people. Which exposition seems to receive some light and strength from Isa 27:6-8 . Or,

2. Thus, For I consider the weakness of my people, that if I should let loose my fury upon them, they could no more stand before me than briers and thorns (to which God’ s people, when they fall into sin, and provoke God, are not unfitly resembled) can stand before a devouring fire, and therefore they would in an instant be utterly destroyed; which I will not do. And this consideration of man’ s imbecility is elsewhere alleged as a reason of God’ s indulgence, as Psa 103:13-16 Isa 57:16 . But this I deliver with submission.

Poole: Isa 27:5 - Or // let him // That he may make peace with me // he shall make peace with me Or or if at any time fury be, or seem to be, in me against my vineyard or people, let him my people, as is clearly implied from the following words...

Or or if at any time fury be, or seem to be, in me against my vineyard or people,

let him my people, as is clearly implied from the following words; for there is no peace to those who are not God’ s people, or to the wicked, Isa 57:21 , and is expressed in the following verse; take hold of my strength , i.e. take hold of my arm, which is metonymically strength, and stay it from giving the blow, not by force, which is impossible, but by humble submission and earnest supplication. Or, strengthen himself , or be strong , (as this word properly signifies, and is elsewhere used,) by my strength ; not by his own strength, which he will oppose to mine, but by my strength, which he may by humble and frequent prayers not only restrain from doing him hurt, but effectually engage to assist him, and do him good. He seems to allude to that history of Jacob’ s wrestling with the angel of God, Gen 32:28 , which he could never have done but by a strength received from God.

That he may make peace with me that instead of opposing me, he may in this manner reconcile himself to me. Or, and

he shall make peace with me as the same words are rendered in the next clause; which may be repeated to assure them of that great and important favour, that God would make peace with them. Or the words may be rendered in both clauses, let him make peace with me, yea, let him make peace with me ; this future verb being taken imperatively, as the other is in the former clause of the verse.

Poole: Isa 27:6 - To take root // Fill the face of the world with fruit To take root to be firmly settled in their possessions, and not tossed hither and thither, as they have been. Fill the face of the world with fruit ...

To take root to be firmly settled in their possessions, and not tossed hither and thither, as they have been.

Fill the face of the world with fruit their posterity shall be so numerous, that their own land shall not be sufficient for them, but they shall be forced to seek habitations in other countries, and shall replenish them with people. But this seems to be understood of the spiritual seed of Jacob, or of believers, who are oft called God’ s Israel, as Rom 9:6 , and elsewhere.

Poole: Isa 27:7 - Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him? // Of them that are slain by him Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him? the question implies a denial; he hath not so smitten him, to wit, Jacob. He hath not dealt so...

Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him? the question implies a denial; he hath not so smitten him, to wit, Jacob. He hath not dealt so severely with his people as he hath dealt with his and their enemies, whom he hath utterly destroyed. This may look either,

1. Backward, upon times past. If you consult former experiences, you will find that God hath done so, hath spared and restored his people, and in judgment remembered mercy to them, when he hath totally ruined their enemies. Or,

2. Forward, upon the time to come, of which he speaks as of a thing past, after the manner of the prophets, and of which he speaks in the next verse.

Of them that are slain by him of those who were slain by Israel, or rather by God at the prayer and on the behalf of Israel. Heb. of his slain ones , i.e. of those of his smiters or enemies who were slain; which exposition is favoured by comparing this with the foregoing clause.

Poole: Isa 27:8 - In measure // Thou wilt debate with it // He stayeth his rough wind // In the day of the east wind In measure with moderation, in certain proportions which God meteth out and fitteth to their strength. When it shooteth forth ; when the vine shoote...

In measure with moderation, in certain proportions which God meteth out and fitteth to their strength. When it shooteth forth ; when the vine shooteth forth its luxuriant branches, he, like the vine-dresser, cutteth them off, but so as not to spoil or destroy the vine. Or, as divers interpreters render it, and the word properly and frequently signifies, in or by casting , or dismissing , or sending her or it out ; or, when thou dost cast or send her out , to wit, out of her own land, in which she was planted, into captivity. He alludes to a man that divorceth his wife, which is expressed by this word; but withal intimates that this shall not be peremptory and perpetual, as other divorces were.

Thou wilt debate with it God is said to debate or contend with men, when he executeth his judgments upon them, as Isa 57:16 Amo 7:4 .

He stayeth his rough wind he mitigateth the severity of the judgment. But I must confess I do not meet with any of the ancient or modern translators that agree with ours in this version; nor is the Hebrew verb used, so far as I know, in the signification of staying or restraining; besides, our translation takes no notice of the Hebrew preposition. But this word unquestionably signifies to remove or take away , as 2Sa 20:13 Pro 25:4,5 , and thus most interpreters understand it. And so the place is very fitly thus rendered, he (or, when he , which particle may easily be understood out of the former clause, as is usual) removeth (understand either it, to wit, the vine; or them, to wit; the enemies of God and his people. And so this agreeth with the former verse, in representing the different way of God’ s proceeding against his people, and his and their enemies. Either way there is only a defect of the pronoun, which I have before showed in divers places to be very usual in the Hebrew language) with or by his rough wind ; by which sometimes vines and other trees are pulled up by the roots, as that did, 1Ki 19:11 , whereby he understands his most terrible judgments.

In the day of the east wind in the time when he sendeth forth his east wind; which he mentions, because that wind in those parts was most violent, and most hurtful to trees and fruits, as hath been oft observed, and therefore is used to signify the most grievous calamities.

Poole: Isa 27:9 - This is all the fruit to take away his sin // When he maketh // The altar // As chalk stones // That are beaten in sunder // Shall not stand up By this, by this manner of God’ s dealing with his people, therefore, that the difference between Jacob and his enemies in their several suffer...

By this, by this manner of God’ s dealing with his people, therefore, that the difference between Jacob and his enemies in their several sufferings may appear,

shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged Heb. expiated or forgiven upon their true repentance , which shall be the happy effect of their chastisement.

This is all the fruit to take away his sin the effect hereof shall not be to destroy the sinner, as it is in other men, but only to take away the guilt and power of their sins.

When he maketh which sin of Jacob’ s shall be purged and taken away, and the judgment removed, when he shall truly repent of all his sins, and especially of his idolatry, to which they were most inclined, and for which the most of God’ s judgments which they had hitherto felt had been inflicted upon them.

The altar which by a usual enallage may be put for the altars, to wit, their idolatrous altars, as is evident from the following words. Possibly he may say the altar with respect to that particular altar which Ahaz had set up in the place of God’ s own altar; and this prophecy might be delivered either to the prophet, or by him to the people, in Ahaz’ s time, while that altar stood and was used.

As chalk stones when he shall break all those goodly altars in pieces, which God by his law had enjoined.

That are beaten in sunder which kind of stones are of themselves apt to break into small pieces, and by the artificer are broken into smaller pieces for making mortar. He seems to allude to that fact of Moses, who, to show his detestation of idolatry, took the golden calf, and burnt it , and ground it to powder; and intimates, that when their repentance should be sincere, it would discover itself by their zeal in destroying the instruments of their idolatry. The groves ; which were frequently erected to the honour of idols, of which we have many instances in Scripture, which God therefore commanded his people to destroy, Deu 7:5 12:3 .

Shall not stand up shall be thrown down with contempt and indignation.

Poole: Isa 27:10 - Yet // The defenced city // The habitation // Forsaken and left like a wilderness // The calf // The branches thereof Yet yet before this glorious promise concerning the removal of Israel’ s sin and calamity be fulfilled, a dreadful and desolating judgment shall...

Yet yet before this glorious promise concerning the removal of Israel’ s sin and calamity be fulfilled, a dreadful and desolating judgment shall first come upon them.

The defenced city Jerusalem, and the rest of the defenced cities in the land, the singular number being put for the plural.

The habitation the most inhabited and populous places. Or, as the Hebrew word properly signifies, their pleasant habitations, whether in the city or country.

Forsaken and left like a wilderness which was fulfilled in the time of the Babylonish captivity.

The calf which is synecdochically put for all sorts of cattle, which may securely feed there, because there shall be no men left to disturb or annoy them.

The branches thereof of their pleasant habitation; of the young trees which shall grow up in that ruinated country.

Poole: Isa 27:11 - When the boughs thereof are withered // They shall be broken off // The women // It is a people of no understanding When the boughs thereof are withered when they shall begin to wither, as they will when they are thus gnawed and cropped by cattle. They shall be br...

When the boughs thereof are withered when they shall begin to wither, as they will when they are thus gnawed and cropped by cattle.

They shall be broken off that there may be no hopes nor possibility of their recovery.

The women he mentions women, either because it is their usual work in the country to make fires, and to gather fuel for them, or to signify that the men should be generally destroyed.

It is a people of no understanding they do not understand either me or themselves, either my word or works; they know not the things which concern their own peace and happiness, but, like brute beasts made to be destroyed, they blindly and wilfully go on in those courses which will bring them to certain ruin. He that made them ; both as they are creatures, and as they are his people; for this also is expressed by making or forming, as Psa 100:3 102:18 149:2 . Thus he overthroweth their false and presumptuous conceits, that God would never destroy the work of his own hands, nor the seed of Abraham his friend for ever; and plainly declareth the contrary.

Poole: Isa 27:12 - Shall beat off // From the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt // Ye shall be gathered one by one Shall beat off or, shall beat out ; which is not meant in a way of punishment, which is rather designed by threshing , as Isa 21:10 25:10 , than by...

Shall beat off or, shall beat out ; which is not meant in a way of punishment, which is rather designed by threshing , as Isa 21:10 25:10 , than by beating; but as an act of mercy, as is evident from the following clause of this, and from the next verse. It is a metaphor from some grains which were beaten out with a rod or staff, of which see Isa 28:27,28 , and then were carefully gathered and laid up, for the use of man.

From the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt from Euphrates to Nilus, which were the two borders of the Land of Promise, Jos 1:4 13:3 . All the Israelites which are left in the land; which are here opposed to those of them that are dispersed into foreign parts, such as Assyria and Egypt.

Ye shall be gathered one by one which signifies either the smallness of the remnant of that numerous people; or rather God’ s exact and singular care of them, that not one of them should be lost.

Poole: Isa 27:13 - The great trumpet // The land of Assyria The great trumpet which may be heard even to the remotest parts of the earth. God shall summon them all together as it were by sound of trumpet, to w...

The great trumpet which may be heard even to the remotest parts of the earth. God shall summon them all together as it were by sound of trumpet, to wit, by an eminent call or act of his providence on their behalf. He alludes to the custom of calling the Israelites, together with trumpets; of which see Num 10:2,3 .

The land of Assyria where the ten tribes were carried captive. The land of Egypt, where many of the Jews were, as is manifest both from Scripture, as Jer 43:7 44:28 Hos 8:13 Zec 10:10 , and from other authors.

PBC: Isa 27:13 - -- See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GREAT TRUMPET 1852 See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GOSPEL TRUMPET 1858

See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GREAT TRUMPET 1852

See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GOSPEL TRUMPET 1858

Haydock: Isa 27:1 - Hard // Leviathan Hard. Septuagint, "holy." (Calmet) --- Leviathan. That is, the devil, the great enemy of the people of God. He is called the bar serpent from...

Hard. Septuagint, "holy." (Calmet) ---

Leviathan. That is, the devil, the great enemy of the people of God. He is called the bar serpent from his strength, and the crooked serpent from his wiles, and the whale of the sea, from they tyranny he exercises in the sea of this world. He was spiritually slain by the death of Christ, when his power was destroyed. (Challoner) ---

It may also literally refer to Nabuchodonosor, and the king of Egypt, or rather to Cambyses, or Holofernes, but particularly Cambyses. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 27:2 - Vineyard Vineyard; the Church of Christ, (Challoner) or Judea. It may be the beginning of a noted song. (Calmet)

Vineyard; the Church of Christ, (Challoner) or Judea. It may be the beginning of a noted song. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 27:3 - Drink Drink; or, as the Hebrew may also be rendered, I will continually water it. (Challoner) --- God will protect his people. (Calmet)

Drink; or, as the Hebrew may also be rendered, I will continually water it. (Challoner) ---

God will protect his people. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 27:4 - In me In me, against the Church; nor shall I become as a thorn or brier in its regard; or march against it, or set it on fire: but it shall always ...

In me, against the Church; nor shall I become as a thorn or brier in its regard; or march against it, or set it on fire: but it shall always take fast hold of me, and keep an everlasting peace with me. (Challoner) ---

God rather speaks of the enemy. If he attempt to lay waste this vineyard, I will chastise him. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 27:6 - Rush in Rush in. Some understand this of the enemies of the true Israel, that shall invade it in vain. Others of the spiritual invasion made by the apostle...

Rush in. Some understand this of the enemies of the true Israel, that shall invade it in vain. Others of the spiritual invasion made by the apostles of Christ. (Challoner) ---

Protestants, "He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root." Septuagint, "those who come are children of Jacob." (Haydock)

Haydock: Isa 27:7 - Struck Struck. Hath God punished the carnal persecuting Jews, in proportion to their doings against Christ and his saints? (Challoner) --- God punished I...

Struck. Hath God punished the carnal persecuting Jews, in proportion to their doings against Christ and his saints? (Challoner) ---

God punished Israel as a father: but he will destroy the Chaldeans, &c. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 27:8 - Cast off // He Cast off. When the synagogue shall be cast off, thou shalt judge it in measure, and in proportion to its crimes. (Challoner) --- The Israelites ha...

Cast off. When the synagogue shall be cast off, thou shalt judge it in measure, and in proportion to its crimes. (Challoner) ---

The Israelites have been rigorously punished. (Calmet) ---

He, &c. God hath designed severe punishments in the day of his wrath. (Challoner)

Haydock: Isa 27:9 - Jacob // Altar Jacob; viz., of such of them as shall be converted. (Challoner) --- Altar, dedicated to idols: then he shall obtain pardon. (Calmet)

Jacob; viz., of such of them as shall be converted. (Challoner) ---

Altar, dedicated to idols: then he shall obtain pardon. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 27:10 - City City. Jerusalem, (Challoner) or more probably Babylon, of which he is going to speak.

City. Jerusalem, (Challoner) or more probably Babylon, of which he is going to speak.

Haydock: Isa 27:11 - Women Women. The princes shall be weak and irresolute. (Calmet) --- Septuagint, "Hither, ye women, coming from the shew. For it is not an intelligent p...

Women. The princes shall be weak and irresolute. (Calmet) ---

Septuagint, "Hither, ye women, coming from the shew. For it is not an intelligent people."

Haydock: Isa 27:12 - River // By one River Euphrates, even to the Nile. (Haydock) --- Nabuchodonosor laid waste all the intermediate countries. Afterwards Cyrus gave the people libert...

River Euphrates, even to the Nile. (Haydock) ---

Nabuchodonosor laid waste all the intermediate countries. Afterwards Cyrus gave the people liberty. On the death of Cambyses, the nations were in consternation; and it was only during the peaceable reign of Darius that Israel returned, though not in a body, as the Jews had done twenty years before, chap. xxvi. (Calmet) ---

By one, into the Church of Christ, John xi. (Menochius)

Haydock: Isa 27:13 - Trumpet Trumpet. The preaching of the Gospel for the conversion of the Jews. (Challoner)

Trumpet. The preaching of the Gospel for the conversion of the Jews. (Challoner)

Gill: Isa 27:1 - In that day the Lord with his sore and great and strong sword // shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent (i), even leviathan that crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea In that day the Lord with his sore and great and strong sword,.... Meaning either the sword of the Spirit, the Word of God, quick and powerful, and sh...

In that day the Lord with his sore and great and strong sword,.... Meaning either the sword of the Spirit, the Word of God, quick and powerful, and sharper than a twoedged sword, Eph 6:17 or else some sore judgment of God: some understand it of the Medes and Persians, by whom the Lord would destroy the Babylonish monarchy; or rather it is the great power of God, or his judiciary sentence, and the execution of it, the same with the twoedged sword, which proceeds out of the mouth of the Word of God, by which the antichristian kings and their armies will be slain, Rev 19:15,

shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent i, even leviathan that crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea; by which are meant, not literally creatures so called, though the Talmud k interprets them of the whales, the leviathan male and female; but mystically earthly princes and potentates, for their great power and authority, their cruelty and voraciousness, their craft and cunning; so the Targum and Aben Ezra interpret them of the kings of the earth; and are to be understood either of distinct persons, or countries they rule over: some think three are pointed at, as the Egyptians, Assyrians, and Edomites, or Romans, so Jarchi; or the Greeks, Turks, and Indians, as Kimchi. The Targum is,

"he shall punish the king who is magnified as Pharaoh the first, and the king that is exalted as Sennacherib the second, and shall slay the king that is strong as the dragon (or whale) that is in the sea.''

Some are of opinion that only one person or kingdom is here meant, either the king of Egypt, compared to such a sea monster, because of the river Nile, that watered his country; see Eze 29:3 others, the king of Babylon, which city was situated by the river Euphrates, and is described as dwelling on many waters, Jer 51:13 and others the king of Tyre, which was situated in the sea; it seems most likely that all tyrannical oppressors and cruel persecutors of the church are intended, who shall be destroyed; and particularly Rome Pagan, signified by a red dragon, Rev 12:3 and Rome Papal, by a beast the dragon gave his power to, which rose out of the sea, and by another out of the earth, which spoke like a dragon, Rev 13:1 both the eastern and western antichrists may be included; the eastern antichrist, the Turk, whose dominions are large, like the waters of the sea; and the western antichrist, the whore of Rome, described as sitting on many waters, Rev 17:1 both which are comparable to serpents and dragons for their cruelty and poison; moreover, Satan, at the head of all these, called the dragon, the old serpent, and devil, must be taken into the account, who is the last enemy that will be destroyed; he will be taken and bound a thousand years, and then, being loosed, will be retaken, and cast into the lake of fire, where the beast and false prophet be, Rev 20:1. Kimchi thinks this prophecy belongs to the times of Gog and Magog.

Gill: Isa 27:2 - In that day sing ye unto her // A vineyard of red wine In that day sing ye unto her,.... The congregation of Israel, as the Targum; or rather the church of Christ; for after, and upon the destruction of hi...

In that day sing ye unto her,.... The congregation of Israel, as the Targum; or rather the church of Christ; for after, and upon the destruction of his and her enemies, there will be great rejoicing and singing alternately, and by responses, as the word signifies; see Rev 15:1. Gussetius l renders it, "afflict her"; as if spoken by the Lord to the enemies to do their worst to her, and he would take care of her, that it shall be in vain, and to no purpose, since he would keep her:

A vineyard of red wine; as the people of the Jews are compared to one, Isa 5:1 so is the church of Christ under the Gospel dispensation; see Son 8:11 a vineyard is a spot of ground separated from others, and the church and people of God are separated from the rest of the world by electing, redeeming, and calling grace; a vineyard is a place set with various vines, so is the church; there is Christ the true vine, the principal one, which stands in the first place, Joh 15:1 and there are particular congregated churches, which belong to the vineyard, the general or catholic church, Son 2:13 and there are particular believers that may be so called, Son 6:11 moreover, sometimes in vineyards other trees are planted besides vines, as barren fig trees, Luk 13:6 and so there are in the visible church of God nominal believers, carnal professors, trees without fruit; there are no true vines but such as are ingrafted and planted in Christ, and who, through union to him, and abiding in him, bring forth fruit; a vineyard is the property of some one person, as this is of Christ, whose it is by his own choice, by his Father's gift, by inheritance, by purchase, as well as it is of his planting, and under his care; vineyards are valuable, pleasant, and profitable, but exposed to beasts of prey, and therefore to be fenced and guarded; all which may be applied to the church of Christ, which shall, in the latter day especially, be very fruitful, and answer to this character given her in this song, a vineyard "of red wine"; the allusion is to such a vineyard, in which vines grow, that bring forth grapes, productive of the best wine, as the red was reckoned in the eastern countries; see Gen 49:12 and so Jarchi and Kimchi interpret it; this is a vineyard very different from that in Isa 5:5 and from the vine of Israel, Hos 10:1 the fruit of it, signified by "red wine", may intend the graces of the Spirit, which like grapes, the fruit of the vine, grow in clusters; where one is, all of them are, and come from Christ, the vine, from whom all the fruit of divine grace is found: and which receive their tincture from the blood of Christ, their vigour and their usefulness; and may be said, like wine, to cheer the heart of God and man, Jdg 9:13 grace when in exercise is delightful to God and Christ, Son 4:9 and gives pleasure to other saints, Psa 34:1 and as the fruit of the vine must be squeezed ere the liquor can be had, so the graces of the Spirit are tried by afflictive dispensations of Providence, by which the preciousness and usefulness of them are made known; moreover, the fruits of righteousness, or good works, may be also intended, by which the graces of faith and repentance are evidenced, and which, when performed aright, are acceptable to God through Christ, and profitable to men; and for these fruits of grace and good works the church will be famous in the latter day.

Gill: Isa 27:3 - I the Lord do keep it // I will water it every moment // lest any hurt it // I will keep it night and day I the Lord do keep it,.... The vineyard, the church, not only by his ministers, called the keepers of it, Son 8:12 but by himself, by his own power; f...

I the Lord do keep it,.... The vineyard, the church, not only by his ministers, called the keepers of it, Son 8:12 but by himself, by his own power; for unless he keeps it, who is Israel's keeper, the watchmen wake in vain; he keeps his church and people from sin, that it does not reign over them; and from Satan's temptations, that they are not destroyed by them; and from the malice of the world, and the poison of false teachers, that they are not ruined thereby; and from a final and total falling away; the Lord's preservation of his church and people will be very manifest in the latter day:

I will water it every moment; both more immediately with the dews of his grace, and the discoveries of his love; that being like dew, it comes from above, is according to the sovereign will of God, without the desert of man falls in the night, silently, gently, and insensibly, and greatly refreshes and makes fruitful, Hos 14:5 and more immediately by the ministry of the word and ordinances, by his ministers, the preachers of the Gospel, who water as well as plant, 1Co 3:6 these are the clouds he sends about to let down the rain of the Gospel upon his church and people, by which they are revived, refreshed, and made fruitful, Isa 5:6 and this being done "every moment", shows, as the care of God, and his constant regard to his people, so that without the frequent communications of his grace, and the constant ministration of his word and ordinances, they would wither and become fruitless; but, by means of these, they are as a watered garden, whose springs fail not, Isa 58:11,

lest any hurt it; as would Satan, who goes about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour; and the men of the world, who are the boar out of the wood, and the wild beast out of the field, that would waste and destroy the vineyard; and false teachers, who are the foxes that would spoil the vines, 1Pe 5:8 but, to prevent any such hurt and damage, the Lord undertakes to keep the church, his vineyard, himself, which he repeats with some addition, to declare the certainty of it; or, "lest he visit it" m; that is, an enemy, as some n supply it; lest he should break down the hedge, and push into it, and waste it; or Jehovah himself, that is, as Gussetius o interprets it, while Jehovah the Father, Isa 27:1, is striking leviathan, or inflicting his judgments upon his enemies, Jehovah the Son promises to take care of his vineyard, the church, that the visitation does not affect them, and they are not hurt by it, but are safe and secure from it; which is a much better sense than that of Kimchi mentioned by him, I will water it every moment, "that not one leaf of it should fail"; the same is observed by Ben Melech, as the sense given by Donesh Ben Labrat:

I will keep it night and day; that is, continually, for he never slumbers nor sleeps; he has kept, and will keep, his church and people, through all the vicissitudes of night and day, of adversity and prosperity, they come into: how great is the condescension of the Lord to take upon him the irrigation and preservation of his people! how dear and precious must they be to him! and what a privilege is it to be in such a plantation as this, watered and defended by the Lord himself!

Gill: Isa 27:4 - Fury is not in me // who would set the briers and thorns against me in battle // I would go through them // I would burn them together Fury is not in me,.... Against his vineyard he takes so much care of, his church and people, whom he has loved with an everlasting love; they are ind...

Fury is not in me,.... Against his vineyard he takes so much care of, his church and people, whom he has loved with an everlasting love; they are indeed deserving of his wrath, but he has not appointed them to it, but has appointed his Son to bear it for them, who has delivered them from wrath to come, and they being justified by his blood and righteousness, are saved from it; and though the Lord chastises them for their sins, yet not in wrath and sore displeasure; there is no wrath or fury in his heart towards them, nor any expressed in the dispensations of his providence:

who would set the briers and thorns against me in battle? either suggesting the weakness of his people, who, was he to deal with them as their sins and corruptions deserved, for which they may be compared to thorns and briers, they would be as unable to bear his wrath and fury as briers and thorns could to withstand a consuming fire; or rather intimating, that should such persons rise up in his vineyard, the church, as often do, comparable to briers and thorns for their unfruitfulness and unprofitableness, for the hurt and mischief they do, and the grief and trouble they give to the people of God, as hypocrites and false teachers, and all such as are of unsound principles, and bad lives and conversations, and which are very offensive to the Lord; and therefore, though there is no fury in him against his vineyard, the church, yet there is against those briers and thorns, wicked men, whom he accounts his enemies, and will fight against them in his wrath, and consume them in his fury; see 2Sa 23:6,

I would go through them: or, "step into it" p; the vineyard, where those briers or thorns are set and grow up; the meaning is, that he would step into the vineyard, and warily and cautiously tread there, lest he should hurt any of the vines, true believers, while he is plucking up and destroying the briers and thorns; or contending, in a warlike manner, with carnal and hypocritical professors:

I would burn them together; or, "I would burn" out of it q; that is, gather out of the vineyard the briers and thorns, and bind them up in bundles, as the tares in the parable, which signify the same as here, and burn them, or utterly destroy them; though the words may be rendered, "who will give, or set, me a brier and thorn in battle, that I should go against it, and burn it up together?", or wholly r and the meaning is, who shall irritate or provoke me to be as a brier and thorn, to hurt, grieve, and distress my people, to cause me to go into them, and against them, in a military way, in wrath and fury to consume them? no one shall. This rendering and sense well agree with the first clause of the verse. Jerom renders it thus, "who will make me an adamant stone?" as the word "shamir" is rendered in Eze 3:9, Zec 7:12 and gives the sense, who will make me hard and cruel, so as to overcome my nature, my clemency, to go forth in a fierce and warlike manner, and walk upon my vineyard, which before I kept, and burn it, which I had hedged about?

Gill: Isa 27:5 - Or let him take hold of my strength // that he may make peace with me, and he shall make peace with me Or let him take hold of my strength,.... Not on the law, as the Targum and Kimchi; but on Christ, as Jerom rightly interprets it; who is the strength ...

Or let him take hold of my strength,.... Not on the law, as the Targum and Kimchi; but on Christ, as Jerom rightly interprets it; who is the strength and power of God, the man of his right hand he has made strong for himself; a strong tower, as the word signifies, a rock of defence, to whom saints may betake themselves, and be safe; in him they have righteousness and strength; in him is everlasting strength. The sense is, let the people of God, any and everyone of them, when afflicted and chastised by him particularly, and are ready to conclude that he is wroth with them, and is dealing with them in hot displeasure; let such look to Christ, and lay hold, and a strong hold, on him by faith, which will be greatly to their advantage and support. The Targum and Jarchi render או, translated "or", by "if"; and then the words are to be read thus, "if he will", or "should, take hold of my strength", or fortress s; or, as some render them, "O that he would t", &c.; it follows,

that he may make peace with me, and he shall make peace with me; or rather, "he shall make peace with me, peace shall he make with me". The phrase is doubled for the certainty of it; and the meaning is, not that the believer who lays hold by faith on Christ, Jehovah's strength, shall make peace with him; which is not in the power of any person to do, no, not the believer by his faith, repentance, or good works; but Christ the power of God, on whom he lays hold, he shall make peace, as he has, by the blood of his cross, and as the only peacemaker; and hereby the believer may see himself reconciled to God, and at peace with him; and therefore may comfortably conclude, under every providence, that there is no fury in God towards him.

Gill: Isa 27:6 - He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root // Israel shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root,.... That is, the posterity of Jacob, the seed of Israel, in a spiritual sense; such who are Israe...

He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root,.... That is, the posterity of Jacob, the seed of Israel, in a spiritual sense; such who are Israelites indeed, in whom there is no guile; these shall be so far from being plucked up, or rooted out of the vineyard, the church, that they shall take deeper root, and their roots shall spread yet more and more; they shall be rooted and grounded in the love of God, and also in Christ, and be built up in him, as well as firmly settled and established in the church, Eph 3:17 or, "them that come to Jacob u"; proselytes unto him, converted Gentiles, that come to the church of Christ, signified by "Jacob", and give up themselves unto it, and are added to it, these shall take root. The words may be rendered, in days "to come, he shall cause Jacob to take root": or, he "shall take root", as Aben Ezra, Jarchi, and Ben Melech supply the words; and so they are a prophecy of the stability and prosperous estate of the church in the latter day:

Israel shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit; which may be understood of the fruits of grace and righteousness, which shall appear upon the people of God, in all parts of the world; or of the great number of converts everywhere; so the Targum, by "fruit", understands children's children; the sense is, that when the church of God, in the latter day, is settled and established, grounded in Christ, and in the doctrines of grace, it shall be in very flourishing and fruitful circumstances, abounding in grace and good works, and with numbers of converts; it shall be like the mustard tree, when it becomes so great a tree as that the birds of the air make their nests in it; and as the stone cut out of the mountain without hands, when it becomes a great mountain, and fills the whole earth, Mat 13:31 compare with this Isa 37:31.

Gill: Isa 27:7 - Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him // or, is he slain according to the slaughter of them that are slain by him Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him?.... No; the Lord does smite his people by afflictive dispensations of his providence; he smites...

Hath he smitten him, as he smote those that smote him?.... No; the Lord does smite his people by afflictive dispensations of his providence; he smites them in their persons, and families, and estates; see Isa 57:17 as he smote Israel, by suffering them to be carried captive, and as the Jews are now smitten by him in their present state; yet not as he smote Pharaoh, with his ten plagues, and him and his host at the Red Sea; or as he smote Sennacherib and his army, by an angel, in one night; or as Amalek was smitten, and its memory perished; or as he will smite mystical Babylon, which will be utterly destroyed; all which have been smiters of God's Israel, who, though smitten of God, yet not utterly destroyed; the Jews returned from captivity, and, though now they are scattered abroad, yet continue a people, and will be saved. God deals differently with his own people, his mystical and spiritual Israel, than with their enemies that smite them: he afflicts them, but does not destroy them, as he does their enemies; he has no fury in him towards his people, but he stirs up all his wrath against his enemies:

or, is he slain according to the slaughter of them that are slain by him? or, "of his slain" w; the Lord's slain, or Israel's slain, which are slain by the Lord for Israel's sake; though Israel is slain, yet not in such numbers, to such a degree, or with such an utter slaughter, as their enemies; though the people of God may come under slaying providences, yet not such as wicked men; they are "chastened, but not killed"; and, though killed with the sword, or other instruments of death, in great numbers, both by Rome Pagan and Papal, yet not according to the slaughter as will be made of antichrist and his followers, Rev 19:15.

Gill: Isa 27:8 - In measure, when it shooteth forth, thou wilt debate with it // he stayeth his rough wind in the day of his east wind In measure, when it shooteth forth, thou wilt debate with it,.... Or, "when he sendeth it forth" x; when God sends forth an affliction on his people, ...

In measure, when it shooteth forth, thou wilt debate with it,.... Or, "when he sendeth it forth" x; when God sends forth an affliction on his people, or gives it a commission to them, as all are sent by him, he does it with moderation; he proportions it to their strength, and will not suffer them to be afflicted above what they are able to bear; and as, in afflicting, he debates and contends with his people, having a controversy with them, so he contends with the affliction he sends, and debates the point with it, and checks and corrects it, and will not suffer it to go beyond due bounds; and in this the afflictions of God's people differ from the afflictions of others, about which he is careless and unconcerned:

he stayeth his rough wind in the day of his east wind: when afflictions, like a blustering and blasting east wind, threaten much mischief, and to carry all before them, Jehovah, from whom they have their commission, and who holds the winds in his fist, represses them, stops the violence of them, and gradually abates the force of them, and quite stills them, when they have answered the end for which they are sent: or "he meditateth" y; or speaketh, as Jarchi interprets it, "by his rough wind in the day of his east wind"; God sometimes meditates hard things against his people, and speaks unto them by the rough dispensations of his providence, admonishes them of their sins, and brings them to a sense and acknowledgment of them, which is his view in suffering them to befall them; or, "he removes by his rough wind" z; their fruit, so Kimchi interprets it; as a rough wind blows off the blossoms and fruits, so the Lord, by afflictions, removes the unkind blossoms and bad fruit from his people, their sins and transgressions, as it follows.

Gill: Isa 27:9 - By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged // and this is all the fruit, to take away sin // when he maketh all the stones of the altar as chalkstones that are beaten in sunder // the groves and the images shall not stand up By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged,.... Or "expiated", or "atoned" a; not that afflictions are atonements for sin, or give satisf...

By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged,.... Or "expiated", or "atoned" a; not that afflictions are atonements for sin, or give satisfaction to divine justice for it; but they are the means of bringing the Lord's people to a sense of their sins, and to repentance and humiliation for them, and confession of them, and of leading them to the blood and sacrifice of Christ, by which they are expiated and atoned, and which the Spirit of God brings near, and applies unto them; whereby their sins, they are convicted of by means of afflictions, and which lay heavy upon their consciences, are purged away, and removed from them:

and this is all the fruit, to take away sin; this is the design and use of afflictions, the profit and advantage of them to the saints, that, being humbled for their sins, they depart from them, leave and forsake them; as well as the guilt of them is taken away from their consciences, through the application of pardoning grace, upon their repentance; see Job 36:8 this shows another difference between the afflictions of God's people and of others: namely, in the use and end of them. The sin of idolatry seems to be particularly designed by what follows; unless the sin of the present Jews, in their disbelief and rejection of the Messiah, should be rather intended; which, through their long affliction, they will be convinced of in the latter day, and it will be taken away from them, and be purged and expiated through the atoning sacrifice of Christ, the Saviour and Deliverer, they will embrace, Rom 11:25,

when he maketh all the stones of the altar as chalkstones that are beaten in sunder; that is, when Jacob, or the people of the Jews, being convinced of their idolatry by their afflictions, shall pull down all their idolatrous altars; perhaps particularly referring to that which Ahaz made, 2Ki 16:10 and remove the stones thereof, and break them to pieces, as chalkstones for lime, which is easily done:

the groves and the images shall not stand up; erect, to be worshipped; but shall be thrown down, demolished, and broke to pieces; and, by thus abandoning their idols and idolatrous practices, they will show the sense they have of their sins, and the sincerity of their repentance; and it is to be observed, that the Jews, after their return from the Babylonish captivity, never practised idolatry more, not in the literal sense; perhaps some respect may be had here to the time when they shall look on him whom they have pierced, and mourn; and when they shall renounce all their legal sacrifices, traditions of the elders, and their own righteousness, their idols, and look alone to the sacrifice of Christ, and declare against all the idolatry of the church of Rome, and all antichristian worship.

Gill: Isa 27:10 - Yet the defenced city shall be desolate // and the habitation forsaken and left like a wilderness // there shall the calf feed // there shall he lie down, and consume the branches thereof Yet the defenced city shall be desolate,.... Or "but", or "notwithstanding" b; though the Lord deals mercifully with his own people, and mixes mercy ...

Yet the defenced city shall be desolate,.... Or "but", or "notwithstanding" b; though the Lord deals mercifully with his own people, and mixes mercy with their afflictions, and causes them to issue well, and for their good; yet he does not deal so with others, his and their enemies: for by the "defenced city" is not meant Jerusalem, as many interpret it, so Kimchi; nor Samaria, as Aben Ezra; nor literal Babylon, as others; but mystical Babylon, the city of Rome, and the whole Roman or antichristian jurisdiction, called the "great" and "mighty" city, Rev 18:10 which will be destroyed, become desolate, or "alone" c, without inhabitants:

and the habitation forsaken and left like a wilderness; or "habitations"; the singular for the plural; even beautiful ones, as the word d signifies, the stately palaces of the pope and cardinals, and other princes and great men, which, upon the destruction of Rome, will be deserted, and become as a wilderness, uninhabited by men:

there shall the calf feed: not Ephraim, as Jarchi, from Jer 31:18 nor the king of Egypt, as Kimchi, from Jer 46:20 nor the righteous that shall attack the city, and spoil its substance, as the Targum; see Psa 68:30 but literally, and which is put for all other cattle, or beasts of the field, that should feed here, without any molestation or disturbance:

there shall he lie down, and consume the branches thereof; which the Targum interprets of the army belonging to the city; it denotes the utter destruction of it, and its inhabitants; see Rev 18:2. Some of the Jewish writers e interpret this passage of Edom or Rome, and of the Messiah being there to take vengeance on it.

Gill: Isa 27:11 - When the boughs thereof are withered, they shall be broken off // the women come and set them on fire // for it is a people of no understanding // therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them; and he that formed them will show them no favour When the boughs thereof are withered, they shall be broken off,.... This city is compared to a tree, whose branches are not only gnawed and consumed b...

When the boughs thereof are withered, they shall be broken off,.... This city is compared to a tree, whose branches are not only gnawed and consumed by cattle, as in the former verse Isa 27:10; but which, in a hot dry summer, are withered and dried up, and so are easily broken, and are fit for nothing but the fire; hence it follows:

the women come and set them on fire; or "gather" them f in order to burn them; as is commonly done with withered branches, Joh 15:6 it may design the burning of the whore of Rome by the kings of the earth; for as antichrist is signified by a woman, so the ten kings that shall hate her, and burn her flesh with fire, may be signified by women; see Rev 17:16. The word here used signifies to illuminate, or give light, which is done when wood is set on fire; hence the Vulgate Latin renders it, "women coming, and teaching it"; and so the Targum,

"women shall come into the house of their gods, and teach them;''

as the woman Jezebel does, Rev 2:20 the former sense is best:

for it is a people of no understanding; or "understandings": that is, the people that inhabit the above city, they are sottish and stupid, have no understanding of God and divine things, of the Scriptures, and the doctrines of them; among whom this maxim obtains, that ignorance is the mother of devotion; they are under a judicial blindness, are given up to strong delusions to believe a lie, 2Th 2:10,

therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them; and he that formed them will show them no favour; but his wrath shall be poured out upon them to the uttermost, which will be fulfilled in the seven vials, and in the destruction of Rome, and the everlasting ruin of the worshippers of the man of sin; see Rev 16:1 no argument can be taken from men's being God's creatures and offspring, and from his being the former and maker of them, to their salvation; or because they are so, therefore shall be saved when they are sinful and sottish; for, being like brutes without understanding, they shall perish as they, without mercy.

Gill: Isa 27:12 - And it shall come to pass in that day // that the Lord shall beat off // from the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt // and ye shall be gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the song will be sung, Isa 27:2 when God will appear to have taken particular care of his church, and ...

And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the song will be sung, Isa 27:2 when God will appear to have taken particular care of his church, and is about to bring it into a flourishing condition; when its troubles and afflictions will come to an end, with a sanctified use of them; and when the city of Rome will be destroyed, and all the antichristian powers, then will be the conversion of the Jews; for antichrist stands in the way of that work:

that the Lord shall beat off; or "beat out" g; alluding either to the beating off of fruit from a tree, or to the beating out of grain from the ear; and signifies the separating of the Lord's people in the effectual calling from the rest of the world; as the fruit beaten off is separated from the tree, and corn beaten out is separated from the ear and chaff; for this beating off does not intend judgment, but mercy; and is done not by the rod of affliction, but by the rod of the Lord's strength sent out of Zion, even the Gospel, the power of God to salvation; which, in the ministration of it, should reach

from the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt; from the river Euphrates, on the banks of which was the city of Babylon, to the river Nile in Egypt, which were the limits and boundaries of the land of Israel, Deu 11:24 and in which places many Jews h were, or would be, as in the following verse Isa 27:13. The Septuagint version is,

"from the ditch of the river to Rhinocorura;''

which, Jerom says, is a town on the borders of Egypt and Palestine. The meaning is, that the Lord would find out his people, wherever they were, in those parts, and separate and call them by his grace, and gather them to himself, and to his church and people, as follows:

and ye shall be gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel; as fruit is gathered up, when beaten off of the tree; and the phrase "one by one" denotes either the fewness of them, and the gradual manner in which they will be gathered; or rather, since this does not so well suit with the conversion of the Jews, which will be of a nation at once, it may signify the completeness of this work, that they shall be everyone gathered, not one shall be left or lost, but all Israel shall be saved; or it may be also expressive of the conjunction of them, and union of them one to another, in the Gospel church state, into which they shall be gathered, as fruit beaten off, and gathered up, is laid together in a storehouse. To this sense agrees the Targum,

"ye shall be brought near one to another, O ye children of Israel i.''

Gill: Isa 27:13 - And it shall come to pass in that day // that the great trumpet shall be blown // and they shall come which were ready to perish in the land of Assyria, and the outcasts in the land of Egypt // and shall worship the Lord in the holy mount at Jerusalem And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the Lord is about to do the above things, and in order to it. The Talmudists k apply this text to the ...

And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the Lord is about to do the above things, and in order to it. The Talmudists k apply this text to the world to come, or times of the Messiah, when the ten tribes shall be returned:

that the great trumpet shall be blown; meaning not the edict or proclamation of Cyrus, but the ministration of the Gospel, called a "trumpet", in allusion to those that were ordered by Moses to be made for the congregation of Israel, Num 10:1, or to the jubilee trumpet, Lev 25:9 or with respect to any trumpet giving a musical sound; the Gospel being a joyful sound, a sound of love, grace, and mercy through Christ, of peace, pardon, righteousness, and salvation by him; and which may be called a "great" one, the author of it, God, being great; and it is the effect of great love, and the produce of great wisdom; it proclaims and publishes great things, great promises, great truths, and a great salvation; it gives a great sound, which has and will again go into all the world, and reach to the ends of the earth; and has been, and will be, attended with great power; the "blowing" of it intends the ministry of the word, which to perform aright requires ability and skill; and here it respects the ministration of it in the latter day, when this Gospel trumpet will be blown more clearly, and without any jar, discord, and confusion; and more loudly, openly, and publicly; and more effectually, and to greater purpose:

and they shall come which were ready to perish in the land of Assyria, and the outcasts in the land of Egypt; all mankind are in a perishing condition, but all are not sensible of it; some are, and they become so through the preaching of the word, attended with the power and Spirit of God; whereby they are convinced of sin, and of their lost estate by nature; their consciences are loaded with guilt, their souls are filled with a sense of wrath; they have a sight of sin, but not of a Saviour from it, or of the pardon of it; they have a view of a broken law, which curses and condemns, and of injured justice brandishing its sword against them, but see they have no righteousness to satisfy one or the other; and find themselves in a starving condition, ready to perish with hunger; and are like the wretched infant "cast out" into the open field, to the "loathing" of its person: and these now, whether in Assyria or in Egypt, or wherever they are, the Gospel trumpet will reach them, and encourage them to come; and powerful and efficacious grace accompanying it will engage and cause them to "come" first to Christ as poor perishing sinners, and venture their souls on him for life and salvation; they shall come to him in a way of believing, for pardon, cleansing, rest, food, righteousness, and life; and then they shall come to his churches, and give up themselves unto them, to walk with them:

and shall worship the Lord in the holy mount at Jerusalem; in the Gospel church, signified frequently by Mount Zion and Jerusalem; see Heb 12:22 where the Jews shall come, when converted, and join themselves, and worship God internally and externally, in spirit and in truth: and it may be true of Mount Zion, and of Jerusalem, in a literal sense, which will be rebuilt, and inhabited by the Jews, and become a place of divine worship.

buka semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Ayat / Catatan Kaki

NET Notes: Isa 27:1 In the Ugaritic mythological texts Leviathan is a sea creature that symbolizes the destructive water of the sea and in turn the forces of chaos that t...

NET Notes: Isa 27:2 Heb “vineyard of delight,” or “vineyard of beauty.” Many medieval mss read כֶּרֶם ח&...

NET Notes: Isa 27:3 Heb “lest [someone] visit [harm] upon it, night and day I guard it.”

NET Notes: Isa 27:4 Heb “it.” The feminine singular suffix apparently refers back to the expression “thorns and briers,” understood in a collectiv...

NET Notes: Isa 27:5 The Hebrew text has, “he makes peace with me, peace he makes with me.” Some contend that two alternative readings are preserved here and o...

NET Notes: Isa 27:6 This apparently refers to a future population explosion. See 26:18.

NET Notes: Isa 27:7 The Hebrew text reads literally, “Or like the killing of his killed ones is he killed?” If one accepts the interpretation of the parallel ...

NET Notes: Isa 27:8 The “east wind” here symbolizes violent divine judgment.

NET Notes: Isa 27:9 As interpreted and translated above, this verse says that Israel must totally repudiate its pagan religious practices in order to experience God’...

NET Notes: Isa 27:10 Heb “and destroy her branches.” The city is the antecedent of the third feminine singular pronominal suffix. Apparently the city is here c...

NET Notes: Isa 27:11 Heb “for not a people of understanding [is] he.”

NET Notes: Isa 27:12 The Israelites will be freed from exile (likened to beating the olives off the tree) and then gathered (likened to collecting the olives).

NET Notes: Isa 27:13 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:1 In that ( a ) day the LORD with his severe and great and strong ( b ) sword shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan that crooked s...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:2 In that day sing ye to her, A vineyard ( c ) of red wine. ( c ) Meaning, of the best wine, which this vineyard, that is, the Church would bring forth...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:4 Fury ( d ) [is] not in me: who would set the briers [and] thorns against me in battle? I would go through them, I would burn them together. ( d ) The...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:5 Or let him ( e ) take hold of my strength, [that] he may make peace with me; [and] he shall make peace with me. ( e ) He marvels that Israel will not...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:6 ( f ) He shall cause them that descend from Jacob to take root: Israel shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit. ( f ) Though...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:7 Hath he smitten ( g ) him, as he smote those that smote him? [or] is he slain according to the slaughter of them that are slain by him? ( g ) He show...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:8 In ( h ) measure, when it shooteth forth, thou wilt debate with it: he stayeth his rough wind in the day of the east wind. ( h ) That is, you will no...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:9 By this therefore shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged; and this [is] all the ( i ) fruit to take away his sin; when he maketh all the stones of the ...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:10 Yet the ( k ) fortified city [shall be] desolate, [and] the habitation forsaken, and left like a wilderness: there shall the calf feed, and there shal...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:11 When its boughs are withered, they shall be broken off: the ( l ) women come, [and] set them on fire: for it [is] a people of no understanding: theref...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:12 And it shall come to pass in that day, [that] the LORD shall gather from the channel of the ( m ) river to the stream of Egypt, and ye shall be gather...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:13 And it shall come to pass in that day, [that] the great trumpet shall be ( n ) blown, and they shall come who were ready to perish in the land of Assy...

buka semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Rentang Ayat

Maclaren: Isa 27:5 - A Libation To Jehovah The Grasp That Brings Peace Let him take hold of My strength, that he may make peace with Me; yea. let him make peace with Me.'--Isaiah 27:5. LYRICAL...

MHCC: Isa 27:1-5 - --The Lord Jesus with his strong sword, the virtue of his death, and the preaching of his gospel, does and will destroy him that had the power of death,...

MHCC: Isa 27:6-13 - --In the days of the gospel, the latter days, the gospel church shall be more firmly fixed than the Jewish church, and shall spread further. May our sou...

Matthew Henry: Isa 27:1-6 - -- The prophet is here singing of judgment and mercy, I. Of judgment upon the enemies of God's church (Isa 27:1), tribulation to those that trouble it...

Matthew Henry: Isa 27:7-13 - -- Here is the prophet again singing of mercy and judgment, not, as before, judgment to the enemies and mercy to the church, but judgment to the church...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:1 - -- Upon whom the judgment of Jehovah particularly falls, is described in figurative and enigmatical words in Isa 27:1 : "In that day will Jehovah visi...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:2-5 - -- The prophecy here passes for the fourth time into the tone of a song. The church recognises itself in the judgments upon the world, as Jehovah's wel...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:6 - -- The prophet now adds to the song of the vineyard, by way of explanation. "In future will Jacob strike roots, Israel blossom and bud, and fill the s...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:7-8 - -- The prophet does not return even now to his own actual times; but, with the certainty that Israel will not be exalted until it has been deeply humbl...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:9 - -- He was angry, but not without love; He punished, but only to be able to pardon again. "Therefore will the guilt of Jacob be purged thus: and this i...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:10-11 - -- The prophet said this from out of the midst of the state of punishment, and was therefore able still further to confirm the fact, that the punishmen...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:12-13 - -- But when Israel repents, the mercy of Jehovah will change all this. "And it will come to pass on that day, Jehovah will appoint a beating of corn f...

Constable: Isa 7:1--39:8 - --III. Israel's crisis of faith chs. 7--39 This long section of the book deals with Israel's major decision in Isa...

Constable: Isa 13:1--35:10 - --B. God's sovereignty over the nations chs. 13-35 This major section of the book emphasizes the folly of ...

Constable: Isa 24:1--27:13 - --2. Divine victory over the nations chs. 24-27 This section of the text has similarities to the p...

Constable: Isa 27:1-13 - --The future regathering of God's people ch. 27 The recurrence of the phrase "in that day"...

Constable: Isa 27:1 - --The defeat of Israel's enemies 27:1 Leviathan was something very horrific (Job 3...

Constable: Isa 27:2-11 - --The future blessing and former discipline of Israel 27:2-11 27:2 Isaiah, speaking for the Lord, announced that a delightful vineyard that produced win...

Constable: Isa 27:12-13 - --The gathering of Jewish and Gentile believers 27:12-13 27:12 The Lord would assemble the remnant of His people from the Promised Land as a farmer gath...

Guzik: Isa 27:1-13 - Ordering the Kingdom of the LORD Isaiah 27 - Ordering the Kingdom of the LORD A. In His Kingdom, God blesses Israel. 1. (1) In the Kingdom of the Lord, Leviathan is defeated. In t...

buka semua
Pendahuluan / Garis Besar

JFB: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) ISAIAH, son of Amoz (not Amos); contemporary of Jonah, Amos, Hosea, in Israel, but younger than they; and of Micah, in Judah. His call to a higher deg...

JFB: Isaiah (Garis Besar) PARABLE OF JEHOVAH'S VINEYARD. (Isa. 5:1-30) SIX DISTINCT WOES AGAINST CRIMES. (Isa. 5:8-23) (Lev 25:13; Mic 2:2). The jubilee restoration of posses...

TSK: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) Isaiah has, with singular propriety, been denominated the Evangelical Prophet, on account of the number and variety of his prophecies concerning the a...

TSK: Isaiah 27 (Pendahuluan Pasal) Overview

Poole: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE ARGUMENT THE teachers of the ancient church were of two sorts: 1. Ordinary, the priests and Levites. 2. Extraordinary, the prophets. These we...

Poole: Isaiah 27 (Pendahuluan Pasal) CHAPTER 27 God’ s care over his vineyard Isa 27:1-6 . His chastisements on them, Isa 27:7-9 . His severe judgments against them, Isa 27:10,11 ...

MHCC: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) Isaiah prophesied in the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. He has been well called the evangelical prophet, on account of his numerous and...

MHCC: Isaiah 27 (Pendahuluan Pasal) (Isa 27:1-5) God's care over his people. (Isa 27:6-13) A promise of their recall to Divine favour.

Matthew Henry: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) An Exposition, With Practical Observations, of The Book of the Prophet Isaiah Prophet is a title that sounds very great to those that understand it, t...

Matthew Henry: Isaiah 27 (Pendahuluan Pasal) In this chapter the prophet goes on to show, I. What great things God would do for his church and people, which should now shortly be accomplished...

Constable: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) Introduction Title and writer The title of this book of the Bible, as is true of the o...

Constable: Isaiah (Garis Besar) Outline I. Introduction chs. 1-5 A. Israel's condition and God's solution ch. 1 ...

Constable: Isaiah Isaiah Bibliography Alexander, Joseph Addison. Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah. 1846, 1847. Revised ed. ...

Haydock: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE PROPHECY OF ISAIAS. INTRODUCTION. This inspired writer is called by the Holy Ghost, (Ecclesiasticus xlviii. 25.) the great prophet; from t...

Gill: Isaiah (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH This book is called, in the New Testament, sometimes "the Book of the Words of the Prophet Esaias", Luk 3:4 sometimes only t...

Gill: Isaiah 27 (Pendahuluan Pasal) INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH 27 This chapter refers to the same times as the two foregoing ones Isa 25:1; and is a continuation of the same song, or rath...

Advanced Commentary (Kamus, Lagu-Lagu Himne, Gambar, Ilustrasi Khotbah, Pertanyaan-Pertanyaan, dll)


TIP #20: Untuk penyelidikan lebih dalam, silakan baca artikel-artikel terkait melalui Tab Artikel. [SEMUA]
dibuat dalam 1.29 detik
dipersembahkan oleh
bible.org - YLSA