Text -- Isaiah 21:3 (NET)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Isa 21:3 - -- Which he mentions with respect to the following similitude of child - bearing.
Which he mentions with respect to the following similitude of child - bearing.
Sharp and grievous pains.
JFB: Isa 21:3 - -- Isaiah imagines himself among the exiles in Babylon and cannot help feeling moved by the calamities which come on it. So for Moab (Isa 15:5; Isa 16:11...
Calvin -> Isa 21:3
Calvin: Isa 21:3 - -- 3.Therefore are my loins, filled with pain Here the Prophet represents the people as actually present, for it was not enough to have simply foretold ...
3.Therefore are my loins, filled with pain Here the Prophet represents the people as actually present, for it was not enough to have simply foretold the destruction of Babylon, if he had not confirmed the belief of the godly in such a manner that they felt as if the actual event were placed before their eyes. Such a representation was necessary, and the Prophet does not here describe the feelings of his own heart, as if he had compassion on the Babylonians, but, on the contrary, as we have formerly said, 67 he assumes, for the time, the character of a Babylonian. 68 It ought undoubtedly to satisfy our minds that the hidden judgments of God are held out to us, as in a mirror, that they may arouse the sluggishness of our faith; and therefore the Prophets describe with greater beauty and copiousness, and paint in lively colors, those things which exceed the capacity of our reason. The Prophet, thus expressing his grief, informs believers how awful is the vengeance of God which awaits the Chaldeans, and how dreadfully they will be punished, as we are struck with surprise and horror when any sad intelligence is brought to us.
As the pangs of a woman that travaileth He adds a stronger expression of grief, when he compares it to that of a woman in labor, as when a person under fearful anguish turns every way, and writhes in every part of his body. Such modes of expression are employed by the Prophets on account of our sluggishness, for we do not perceive the judgments of God till they be pointed at, as it were, with the finger, and affect our senses. We are warned to be on our guard before they arrive.
TSK -> Isa 21:3
TSK: Isa 21:3 - -- are : Isa 15:5, Isa 16:9, Isa 16:11; Hab 3:16
pangs have : Isa 13:8, Isa 26:17; Psa 48:6; Jer 48:41, Jer 49:22, Jer 50:43; Mic 4:9, Mic 4:10; 1Th 5:3
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 21:3
Barnes: Isa 21:3 - -- Therefore - In this verse, and the following, the prophet represents himself as "in"Babylon, and as a witness of the calamities which would com...
Therefore - In this verse, and the following, the prophet represents himself as "in"Babylon, and as a witness of the calamities which would come upon the city. He describes the sympathy which he feels in her sorrows, and represents himself as deeply affected by her calamities. A similar description occurred in the pain which the prophet represents himself as enduring on account of the calamities of Moab (see Isa 15:5, note; Isa 16:11, note).
My loins - (see the note at Isa 16:11).
With pain - The word used here (
I was bowed down - Under the grief and sorrow produced by these calamities.
At the hearing it - The Hebrew may have this sense, and mean that these things were made to pass before the eye of the prophet, and that the sight oppressed him, and bowed him down. But more probably the Hebrew letter
Poole -> Isa 21:3
Poole: Isa 21:3 - -- My loins which he mentions with respect to the following similitude of child-bearing, in which the loins are sorely pained. And this the prophet spea...
My loins which he mentions with respect to the following similitude of child-bearing, in which the loins are sorely pained. And this the prophet speaks, either,
1. In the name and person of the Babylonian. Or rather,
2. In his own name; which is most natural, and agrees best with the last clause of the verse, which plainly speaks of the torment which he had in the mere hearing of the word, and seeing the vision, and not of that which they had in the feeling of it; although the latter is implied in the former; and the prophet expresseth his horror in hearing and seeing, to intimate the dreadful horror which should seize upon them when it came upon them.
As the pangs of a woman that travaileth sharp and grievous pains.
Haydock -> Isa 21:3
Gill -> Isa 21:3
Gill: Isa 21:3 - -- Therefore are my loins filled with pain,.... As a woman at the time of childbirth, as the following words show: these words are spoken by the prophet,...
Therefore are my loins filled with pain,.... As a woman at the time of childbirth, as the following words show: these words are spoken by the prophet, not with respect to himself, as if he was pained at heart at the prophecy and vision he had of the ruin of Babylon, since that was a mortal enemy of his people; and besides, their sighing being made to cease could never be a reason of distress in him, but of joy: these words are spoken by him in the person of the Babylonians, and particularly of Belshazzar their king:
pangs have taken hold upon me, as the pangs of a woman that travaileth; which come suddenly and at once, are very sharp and strong, and inevitable, which cannot be escaped; so the sudden destruction of the wicked, and particularly of antichrist at the last day, and the terror that shall attend it, are expressed by the same metaphor, 1Th 5:2,
I was bowed down at the hearing of it; distorted and convulsed; not the prophet at the hearing of the prophecy, but Belshazzar, whom he personated, at hearing that Cyrus had entered the city, and was at the gates of his palace:
I was dismayed at the seeing of it; the handwriting upon the wall, at which his countenance changed, his thoughts were troubled, his loins loosed, and his knees smote one against another, Dan 5:6.