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Text -- Isaiah 10:6 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Isa 10:6
Wesley: Isa 10:6 - -- By my providence, giving him both occasion and inclination to this expedition.
By my providence, giving him both occasion and inclination to this expedition.
"Kings' hearts are in the hand of the Lord" (Pro 21:1).
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Judah, against whom Sennacherib was forming designs.
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JFB: Isa 10:6 - -- HORSLEY translates: "And then to make him (the Assyrian) a trampling under foot like the mire of the streets" (so Isa 10:12; Isa 33:1; Zec 10:5). But ...
Calvin -> Isa 10:6
Calvin: Isa 10:6 - -- 6.To a hypocritical nation He proceeds with the former statement, by which he called the Assyrian the rod of God’s indignation; for as the father ...
6.To a hypocritical nation He proceeds with the former statement, by which he called the Assyrian the rod of God’s indignation; for as the father does not in vain take up the rod, but has this object in view, to chastise his son, so he declares that the Lord’s rod has no uncertain destination, but is appointed for the chastisement of the unthankful and wicked. He calls it a hypocritical or wicked nation, because it has no uprightness or sincerity. Uprightness is contrasted with hypocritical conduct, because uprightness is the chief of all the virtues; and in like manner hypocrisy is the mother of all the vices. It is therefore no light accusation which he brings against the Israelites; but he charges them with what is most of all to be abhorred, and therefore immediately afterwards he calls them the people of his indignation, as he elsewhere calls the Edomites the people of his curse. (Isa 34:5.) Though he means that he is displeased with the Jews, yet the Hebrew phraseology is much more emphatic; for it conveys the idea that the reason why this nation is devoted to destruction is, that nothing is to be found in it but grounds of anger. Indeed, God is never angry with us unless we have provoked him by our sins; but when wickedness has come to its greatest height, his indignation is kindled, and cannot be appeased. Thus he cuts off the hope of reconciliation from hypocrites and wicked men, who ceased not continually to add sin to sin.
I will command him to take the spoil and to take the prey He says that he has given a loose rein to the fierceness of enemies, that they may indulge without control in every kind of violence and injustice. Now, this must not be understood as if the Assyrians had a command from God by which they could excuse themselves. There are two ways in which God commands; by his secret decree, of which men are not conscious; and by his law, in which he demands from us voluntary obedience. This must be carefully observed, that we may reply to fanatics, who argue in an irreligious manner about the decree of God, when they wish to excuse their own wickedness and that of others. It is of importance, I say, to make a judicious distinction between these two ways of commanding. When the Lord reveals his will in the law, I must not ascend to his secret decree, which he intended should not be known to me, but must yield implicit obedience.
Now, if any one allege that he obeys God, when he complies with his sinful passions, he is guilty of falsehood, by vainly attempting to involve God in the guilt of his crimes, to which he knows that he is led by the failings of his own heart; for on this point no other witness or judge is needed but a man’s own conscience. God does indeed make use of the agency of a wicked man, but the man has no such intention. It is therefore accidental, so far as relates to men, that he acts by the wicked and reprobate; for they neither know that they serve God, nor wish to do so. Accordingly if they seize on this pretext, it is easy to prove that, when they yield obedience to their own sinful passion, they are at the greatest possible distance from obeying God. They have the will of God declared in his law, so that it is in vain for them to seek it anywhere else. So far as they are concerned, they do not perform the work of God, but the work of the devil; for they serve their own lusts. (Eph 2:2.) Nothing certainly was farther from the intention of the Assyrians than to give their services to God, but they were hurried along by their lust and ambition and covetousness. Yet the Lord directed their exertions and plans to an object which was totally different, and which was unknown to themselves.
This passage may be thus summed up. “It will be an uncommon and extraordinary instance of God’s vengeance, when the Assyrians shall attack them with unrestrained liberty of action; for they will be sent by God, not to treat them with gentleness and moderation, but to plunder them in the manner of an invading army.” He likewise adds, to tread them down. Nothing can go beyond this, for it means that the vanquished are not spared, but that every possible species of abuse has been heaped upon then.
TSK -> Isa 10:6
TSK: Isa 10:6 - -- against : Isa 9:17, Isa 19:17, Isa 29:13, Isa 30:9-11, Isa 33:14; Jer 3:10, Jer 4:14; Mat 15:7
will I give : Isa 10:13, Isa 10:14, Isa 37:26, Isa 37:2...
against : Isa 9:17, Isa 19:17, Isa 29:13, Isa 30:9-11, Isa 33:14; Jer 3:10, Jer 4:14; Mat 15:7
will I give : Isa 10:13, Isa 10:14, Isa 37:26, Isa 37:27, Isa 41:25, Isa 45:1-5; Jer 25:9, Jer 34:22, Jer 47:6, Jer 47:7
tread them : Heb. lay them a treading, Isa 22:5, Isa 63:3, Isa 63:6; 2Sa 22:43; Mic 7:10; Zec 10:5
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 10:6
Barnes: Isa 10:6 - -- I will send him - Implying that he was entirely in the hand of God, and subject to his direction; and showing that God has control over kings a...
I will send him - Implying that he was entirely in the hand of God, and subject to his direction; and showing that God has control over kings and conqueror’ s; Pro 21:1.
Against an hypocritical nation - Whether the prophet here refers to Ephraim, or to Judah, or to the Jewish people in general, has been an object of inquiry among interpreters. As the designs of Sennacherib were mainly against Judah. it is probable that that part of the nation was intended. This is evidently the case, if, as has been supposed, the prophecy was uttered after the captivity of the ten tribes; see Isa 10:20. It need scarcely be remarked, that it was eminently the characteristic of the nation that they were hypocritical; compare Isa 9:17; Mat 15:17; Mar 7:6.
And against the people of my wrath - That is, those who were the objects of my wrath; or the people on whom I am about to pour out my indignation.
To take the spoil - To plunder them.
And to tread them down - Hebrew, ‘ And to make them a treading down.’ The expression is drawn from war, where the vanquished and the slain are trodden down by the horses of the conquering army. It means here, that the Assyrian would humble and subdue the people; that he would trample indignantly on the nation, regarding them with contempt, and no more to be esteemed than the mire of the streets. A similar figure occurs in Zec 10:5 : ‘ And they shall be as mighty men which tread down their enemies in the mire of the streets in battle.’
Poole -> Isa 10:6
Poole: Isa 10:6 - -- I will send him not by express commission, but by the secret yet powerful conduct of my providence, giving him both occasion and inclination to this ...
I will send him not by express commission, but by the secret yet powerful conduct of my providence, giving him both occasion and inclination to this expedition. Hypocritical: See Poole "Isa 9:17" .
The people of my wrath the objects of my just wrath, devoted to destruction.
Give him a charge by putting this instinct into his mind.
To tread them down like the mire of the streets which signifies that he should easily conquer them, and utterly destroy them, as he did after this time.
Haydock -> Isa 10:6
Haydock: Isa 10:6 - -- Deceitful. Hebrew, "hypocritical," joining my worship with that of idols. (Calmet) ---
They had solemnly promised to serve the Lord, Exodus xix. 8...
Deceitful. Hebrew, "hypocritical," joining my worship with that of idols. (Calmet) ---
They had solemnly promised to serve the Lord, Exodus xix. 8. (Worthington)
Gill -> Isa 10:6
Gill: Isa 10:6 - -- I will send him against a hypocritical nation,.... The people of Israel, who might well be called so, since everyone of them was a hypocrite, Isa 9:17...
I will send him against a hypocritical nation,.... The people of Israel, who might well be called so, since everyone of them was a hypocrite, Isa 9:17 pretending to love, fear, and serve the Lord, when it was only outwardly, and by profession, and not in deed, and in truth; their character contains the reason of the Lord's calling and sending the Assyrian to correct and chastise them:
and against the people of my wrath: who provoked him to wrath, were deserving of it, and upon whom he was about to bring it; it was their hypocrisy that stirred up his wrath against them; nothing is more hateful to God than that:
will I give him a charge, to take the spoil, and to take the prey: that is, the Assyrian monarch, to make a spoil and a prey of the people of the Jews, not by any legal commission, or express command, but by the secret power of his providence, guiding and directing him into the land of Judea, to ravage and spoil it:
and to tread them down like the mire of the streets: which denotes the great subjection of the inhabitants of it to him; the very low and mean estate into which they should be brought; the great contempt they should be had in; the little account that should be had of them; and their inability to help and recover themselves.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 10:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Isa 10:1-34 - --1 The woe of tyrants.5 Assyria, the rod of hypocrites, for his pride shall be broken.20 A remnant of Israel shall be saved.24 Judah is comforted with ...
MHCC -> Isa 10:5-19
MHCC: Isa 10:5-19 - --See what a change sin made. The king of Assyria, in his pride, thought to act by his own will. The tyrants of the world are tools of Providence. God d...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 10:5-19
Matthew Henry: Isa 10:5-19 - -- The destruction of the kingdom of Israel by Shalmaneser king of Assyria was foretold in the foregoing chapter, and it had its accomplishment in the ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 10:5-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 10:5-6 - --
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