
Text -- Isaiah 27:10 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Isa 27:10 - -- 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.

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

The most inhabited and populous places.

Wesley: Isa 27:10 - -- 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.
JFB: Isa 27:10 - -- 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).
Clarke -> Isa 27:10
There shall the calf feed - That is, the king of Egypt, says Kimchi.
Calvin -> Isa 27:10
Calvin: Isa 27:10 - -- 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
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.
TSK -> Isa 27:10
TSK: Isa 27:10 - -- 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 ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 27:10
Barnes: Isa 27:10 - -- Yet the defensed city - Gesenius supposes that this means Jerusalem. So Calvin and Piscator understand it. Others understand it of Samaria, oth...
Yet the defensed city - Gesenius supposes that this means Jerusalem. So Calvin and Piscator understand it. Others understand it of Samaria, others of Babylon (as Vitringa, Rosenmuller, and Grotius), and others of cities in general, denoting those in Judea, or in other places. To me it seems plain that Babylon is referred to. The whole description seems to require this; and especially the fact that this song is supposed to be sung after the return from captivity to celebrate their deliverance. It is natural, therefore, that they should record the fact that the strong and mighty city where they had been so long in captivity, was now completely destroyed. For the meaning of thee phrase ‘ defensed city,’ see the note at Isa 25:2.
Shall be desolate - (see Isa 25:2; compare the notes at Isa. 13)
The habitation forsaken - The habitation here referred to is Babylon. It means the habitation or dwelling-place where "we"have so long dwelt as captives (compare Pro 3:33; Pro 21:20; Pro 24:15).
And left like a wilderness - See the description of Babylon in the notes at Isa 13:20-22.
There shall the calf feed - It shall become a vast desert, and be a place for beasts of the forest to range in (compare Isa 7:23; see the note at Isa 5:17).
And consume the branches thereof - The branches of the trees and shrubs that shall spring up spontaneously in the vast waste where Babylon was.
Poole -> Isa 27:10
Poole: Isa 27:10 - -- 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.
Haydock -> Isa 27:10
Haydock: Isa 27:10 - -- 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.
Gill -> Isa 27:10
Gill: Isa 27:10 - -- 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.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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...
Geneva Bible -> Isa 27:10
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...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Isa 27:6-13
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 27:7-13
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 27:10-11
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...
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