
Text -- Isaiah 48:14 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Which of the gods whom any of you serve.
JFB: Isa 48:12-15 - -- The Almighty, who has founded heaven and earth, can, and will, restore His people.
The Almighty, who has founded heaven and earth, can, and will, restore His people.


JFB: Isa 48:14 - -- That is, "He whom the Lord hath loved will do," &c. [LOWTH]; namely, Cyrus (Isa 44:28; Isa 45:1, Isa 45:13; Isa 46:11). However, Jehovah's language of...
Clarke -> Isa 48:14
Clarke: Isa 48:14 - -- Which among them hath declared these things "Who among you hath predicted these things"- For בהם bahem , "among them,"twenty-one MSS., nine anci...
Which among them hath declared these things "Who among you hath predicted these things"- For
The Lord hath loved him: he will do his pleasure on Babylon "He, whom Jehovah hath loved, will execute his will on Babylon"- That is, Cyrus; so Symmachus has well rendered it:
On the Chaldeans - The preposition is lost; it is supplied in the edition of 1486, which has
Calvin -> Isa 48:14
Calvin: Isa 48:14 - -- 14.Assemble, all of you, and hear There can be no doubt that the Prophet addresses the Jews, though here he utters nothing that ought not to be ackno...
14.Assemble, all of you, and hear There can be no doubt that the Prophet addresses the Jews, though here he utters nothing that ought not to be acknowledged by all. But because unbelieving and irreligious men have no ears, on this account he does not invite them to “hear.” We know that the Jews enjoyed this privilege above other nations, that God revealed himself to them. (Psa 147:19; Rom 3:2.) “God is known in Judea,” says the Psalmist,: his name is great in Israel.” (Psa 126:1.) So much the less excusable was either their slothfulness or their obstinacy, in paying scarcely any regard to their own prosperity. Whence arose their great levity or proneness to revolt, but from their undervaluing or despising the inestimable treasure of heavenly doctrine? They therefore deserved to be sharply and severely rebuked by the Prophet, who now exclaims against them, indirectly remarking that they wickedly and perversely agree among themselves to cast into the shade the grace of God.
Who among them foretelleth those things? Here God appears to permit the Jews to bring forward publicly any objection which they can make, as those who trust to the goodness of their cause venture to taunt their adversaries: “Produce thy arguments; if thou possessest any acuteness, shew it.” Of his own accord, therefore, he makes an attack upon them, and gives them permission to shew, if they can find any argument to that effect, that such things were foretold by the gods of the Gentiles. We may also extend it to the diviners and augurs, who claimed for themselves the knowledge of future events, and who could not at all foresee such things. With the same view he will repeat what follows in the next verse, “It is I, it is I who have spoken.” The object of the whole is to shew that the Jews waver, and even fall away, in consequence of not estimating sufficiently how extraordinary a blessing it is to learn from the sacred mouth of God all that is necessary for their salvation.
Jehovah hath loved him, and he shall execute his pleasure on Babylon He points out a single instance, that God had now deigned to foretell to them the end of their captivity in Babylon. Cyrus is not named by him as the dispenser of this favor, but, as if he were speaking of a man who was known and ascertained, he says, without mentioning the name, that God has chosen him to take Babylon by force. The word loved is not employed in an absolute sense, but
And his arm 237 Some read the word “arm” in the nominative, and others in the accusative case; but it makes little difference as to the meaning. Arm may here be taken for “work,” and in a metaphorical sense; and thus the passage will read more smoothly. “He will execute his counsel on Babylon, his work on the Babylonians;” for we know that it is a distinguishing peculiarity in the style of the prophets to join together “the work of the Lord” and his “counsel.” Indirectly he reproaches the Jews with their ingratitude in refusing to believe the promises of God, though he points out the event, as it were, with the finger, and speaks in a very different manner from that in which either diviners or false gods are accustomed to speak. In a word, he wishes to convince the Jews that, the taking of Babylon by storm shall be “the work of the Lord,” under whose direction Cyrus shall execute it, in order that the Church may at length be delivered.
TSK -> Isa 48:14
TSK: Isa 48:14 - -- assemble : Isa 41:22, Isa 43:9, Isa 44:7, Isa 45:20,Isa 45:21
among them : Instead of bahem ""among them,""thirty-five manuscripts and two editions...
assemble : Isa 41:22, Isa 43:9, Isa 44:7, Isa 45:20,Isa 45:21
among them : Instead of
The Lord : Rather, ""He whom the Lord hath loved, will execute his will on Babylon:""that is, Cyrus. Isa 45:1-3; Mar 10:21
he will do : Isa 13:4, Isa 13:5, Isa 13:17, Isa 13:18, Isa 44:28, Isa 46:11; Jer 50:21-29, Jer 51:20-24

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 48:14
Barnes: Isa 48:14 - -- All ye, assemble yourselves and hear - Ye Jews who are in Babylon, gather together, and listen to the assurance that God is able to protect you...
All ye, assemble yourselves and hear - Ye Jews who are in Babylon, gather together, and listen to the assurance that God is able to protect you, and that he will certainly restore you to your own country.
Which among them - Who among the pagan?
Hath declared these things? - The things relating to the destruction of Babylon, and the rescue of his people. This is an appeal similar to that which God has often made, that he alone can predict future events. None of the astrologers, soothsayers, or diviners of Babylon had been able to foretell the expedition and the conquests of Cyrus, and the capture of the city. If they had been able to foresee the danger, they might have guarded against it, and the city might have been saved. But God had predieted it a hundred and fifty years before it occurred, and this demonstrated, therefore, that he alone was God.
The Lord hath loved him - Lowth renders this, ‘ He whom Jehovah hath loved will execute his will on Babylon.’ The Septuagint renders it, ‘ Loving thee, I will execute thy will against Babylon.’ There can be no doubt that it refers to Cyrus, and that the meaning is, that he whom Yahweh had loved would accomplish his will on Babylon. It does not necessarily mean that Yahweh was pleased with his moral character, or that he was a pious man (compare the notes at Isa 41:2); but that he was so well pleased with him as an instrument to accomplish his purposes, that he chose to employ him for that end.
He will do his pleasure on Babylon - He will accomplish all his desire on that city; that is, he will take, and subdue it. The word ‘ his’ here, may refer either to Cyrus or to Yahweh. Probably it means that Cyrus would do to Babylon what would be pleasing to Yahweh.
And his arm - The arm is a symbol of strength, and is the instrument by which we execute our purposes.
Poole -> Isa 48:14
Poole: Isa 48:14 - -- All ye ye Jews, to whom he addressed his speech, Isa 48:12 , and continueth his speech, Isa 48:16,17 , &c. Assemble ; I challenge you all to answer ...
All ye ye Jews, to whom he addressed his speech, Isa 48:12 , and continueth his speech, Isa 48:16,17 , &c. Assemble ; I challenge you all to answer what I have said before, and am now going to say again.
Which among them hath declared these things? which of the gods whom any of you have served or do still hanker after? The Lord hath loved him, to wit, Cyrus, who might easily be understood out of the foregoing context, in which he is frequently mentioned. The pronoun is put for the noun, as is usual both in Scripture and in other authors. Now God loved Cyrus, not with a special, and everlasting, and complacential love, for he was a heathen, and had some great vices as well as virtues; but with that general love and kindness which God hath for all his creatures, as is observed, Psa 145:9 ; and moreover with that particular kind of love which God hath for such men as excel others in any virtues, as Cyrus did; in which sense Christ loved the young man, Mar 10:21 ; and with a love of good-will and beneficence. God had such a kindness for him, as to make him a most glorious and victorious general and king, and the great instrument for the deliverance of his own people; which was a singular honour and advantage to him, and might have been far greater, and extended to the eternal salvation of his soul, if he had not wanted a heart to use the price which God hereby put into his hand. And as anger being ascribed to God is not meant of the affection, for such passions are inconsistent with the perfection of God’ s nature, but of the effect; so the love of God, when it is applied in Scripture to such persons as Cyrus, is not so much to be understood of an inward affection, as of the outward effects of it; and so this love is explained in the following words, by that prosperous success which God gave him against the Chaldeans.
He will do his pleasure on Babylon Cyrus shall execute that I have appointed him to do for the destruction of Babylon, and for the redemption of my people; which was in itself a good work; and therefore this is added as the reason why God loved him.
His arm shall be on the Chaldeans he shall smite and subdue them.
Haydock -> Isa 48:14
Gill -> Isa 48:14
Gill: Isa 48:14 - -- All ye assemble yourselves, and hear,.... That is, the people of the Jews, Jacob and Israel his called, before addressed; who are bid to gather togeth...
All ye assemble yourselves, and hear,.... That is, the people of the Jews, Jacob and Israel his called, before addressed; who are bid to gather together, and draw nigh, that they might hear what the Lord had to say to them:
which among them hath declared these things? that are future, that concern the redemption and salvation of Israel? which of all the idols among the nations, or of the priests and soothsayers among them, whom the Jews were prone to listen to, that could foretell things to come, such as these the Lord had said should be?
the Lord hath loved him; not Israel, as the Targum; but Cyrus, whom the Lord loved as a man, as he does all his creatures; and whom he distinguished from others, by bestowing excellent qualifications on him; and whom he raised to great dignity, and gave him great honour, by using him as an instrument in his hand for the deliverance of his people; and who was a type of Christ, the dear Son of God's love, in whom he is always well pleased.
He will do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall be on the Chaldeans; either he shall do as he pleases with Babylon, and with his army destroy the Chaldeans; or he shall do the pleasure of God on Babylon, and destroy the inhabitants of it, and deliver his people from it. This is also true of Christ, who will do his pleasure on mystical Babylon, destroy antichrist, and all the antichristian states, with his mighty arm and power, with the breath of his mouth, and with the brightness of his coming.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 48:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Isa 48:1-22 - --1 God, to convince the people of their foreknown obstinancy, revealed his prophecies.9 He saves them for his own sake.12 He exhorts them to obedience,...
MHCC -> Isa 48:9-15
MHCC: Isa 48:9-15 - --We have nothing ourselves to plead with God, why he should have mercy upon us. It is for his praise, to the honour of his mercy, to spare. His bringin...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 48:9-15
Matthew Henry: Isa 48:9-15 - -- The deliverance of God's people out of their captivity in Babylon was a thing upon many accounts so improbable that there was need of line upon line...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 48:12-16
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 48:12-16 - --
The prophecy opened with "Hear ye;"and now the second half commences with "Hear."Three times is the appeal made to Israel: Hear ye; Jehovah alone is...
Constable: Isa 40:1--55:13 - --IV. Israel's calling in the world chs. 40--55
This part of Isaiah picks up a theme from chapters 1-39 and develo...

Constable: Isa 40:1--48:22 - --A. God's grace to Israel chs. 40-48
These chapters particularly address the questions of whether God cou...

Constable: Isa 48:1-22 - --4. The servant's attention to her Lord ch. 48
This chapter climaxes Isaiah's arguments for Yahwe...
