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Text -- Isaiah 2:6 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
The Lord’s Day of Judgment
2:6 Indeed, O Lord, you have abandoned your people, the descendants of Jacob. For diviners from the east are everywhere; they consult omen readers like the Philistines do. Plenty of foreigners are around.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · 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
 · Philistines a sea people coming from Crete in 1200BC to the coast of Canaan


Dictionary Themes and Topics: TRADE | Soothsayer | MANASSEH (3) | Isaiah | Idolatry | HEZEKIAH (2) | ENCHANTMENT | Divination | COMMERCE | Backsliders | ARABIA | APPAREL | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Isa 2:6 - -- For the following reasons.

For the following reasons.

Wesley: Isa 2:6 - -- Wilt certainly forsake and reject.

Wilt certainly forsake and reject.

Wesley: Isa 2:6 - -- The body of that nation.

The body of that nation.

Wesley: Isa 2:6 - -- Their land is full of the idolatrous manners of the eastern nations, the Syrians and Chaldeans.

Their land is full of the idolatrous manners of the eastern nations, the Syrians and Chaldeans.

Wesley: Isa 2:6 - -- Who were infamous for those practices.

Who were infamous for those practices.

Wesley: Isa 2:6 - -- They delight in their company, and conversation, making leagues, and friendships, and marriages with them.

They delight in their company, and conversation, making leagues, and friendships, and marriages with them.

JFB: Isa 2:6 - -- Rather, "For": reasons why there is the more need of the exhortation in Isa 2:5.

Rather, "For": reasons why there is the more need of the exhortation in Isa 2:5.

JFB: Isa 2:6 - -- Transition to Jehovah: such rapid transitions are natural, when the mind is full of a subject.

Transition to Jehovah: such rapid transitions are natural, when the mind is full of a subject.

JFB: Isa 2:6 - -- Rather, filled, namely, with the superstitions of the East, Syria, and Chaldea.

Rather, filled, namely, with the superstitions of the East, Syria, and Chaldea.

JFB: Isa 2:6 - -- Forbidden (Deu 18:10-14).

Forbidden (Deu 18:10-14).

JFB: Isa 2:6 - -- Southwest of Palestine: antithesis to "the east."

Southwest of Palestine: antithesis to "the east."

JFB: Isa 2:6 - -- Rather, join hands with, that is, enter into alliances, matrimonial and national: forbidden (Exo 23:32; Neh 13:23, &c.).

Rather, join hands with, that is, enter into alliances, matrimonial and national: forbidden (Exo 23:32; Neh 13:23, &c.).

Clarke: Isa 2:6 - -- They be replenished "And they multiply"- Seven MSS. and one edition, for ישפיקו yaspiku , read ישפיחו yaspichu , "and have joined them...

They be replenished "And they multiply"- Seven MSS. and one edition, for ישפיקו yaspiku , read ישפיחו yaspichu , "and have joined themselves to the children of strangers;"that is, in marriage or worship. - Dr. Jubb. So Vulg., adhaeserunt. Compare Isa 14:1. But the very learned professor Chevalier Michaelis has explained the word יספחו yesupachu , Job 30:7, (German translation, note on the place), in another manner; which perfectly well agrees with that place, and perhaps will be found to give as good a sense here. ספיח saphiach , the noun, means corn springing up, not from the seed regularly sown on cultivated land, but in the untilled field, from the scattered grains of the former harvest. This, by an easy metaphor, is applied to a spurious brood of children irregularly and casually begotten. The Septuagint seem to have understood the verb here in this sense, reading it as the Vulgate seems to have done. This justifies their version, which it is hard to account for in any other manner: και τεκνα πολλα αλλοφυλα εγενηθῃ αυτοις . Compare Hos 5:7, and the Septuagint there. But instead of ובילדי ubeyaldey , "and in the children,"two of Kennicott’ s and eight of De Rossi’ s MSS. have וכילדי ucheyaldey , "and as the children."And they sin impudently as the children of strangers. See De Rossi

And are soothsayers "They are filled with diviners"- Hebrews "They are filled from the east;"or "more than the east."The sentence is manifestly imperfect. The Septuagint, Vulgate, and Chaldee, seem to have read כמקדם kemikkedem ; and the latter, with another word before it, signifying idols; "they are filled with idols as from of old."Houbigant, for מקדם mikkedem , reads מקסם mikkesem , as Brentius had proposed long ago. I rather think that both words together give us the true reading: מקדם mikkedem , מקסם mikkesem , "with divination from the east;"and that the first word has been by mistake omitted, from its similitude to the second.

Calvin: Isa 2:6 - -- 6.Surely thou hast forsaken thy people In these words he now plainly charges the people with having a perverse disposition; and he does this not in d...

6.Surely thou hast forsaken thy people In these words he now plainly charges the people with having a perverse disposition; and he does this not in direct terms, but, as it were, bursting into astonishment, he suddenly breaks off his discourse, and, turning to God, exclaims, “Why should I waste words on a nation grown desperate, which thou, O Lord, hast justly rejected, because, giving itself up to idolatrous practices, it has treacherously departed from thy word?”

It may also be a prediction of punishment still future which he foresaw by the Spirit; as if he had said, That it was not wonderful if ruin and desolation were about to overtake Mount Zion on account of the great crimes of the nation. His design may have been, that so mournful a spectacle might not be the occasion of despair, and that those who were capable of being cured might be moved by repentance, and turn to God ere this calamity arrived. For while the prophets are heralds of God’s judgments, and threaten vengeance against the ungodly, they usually endeavor, at the same time, to bring as many as they can to some kind of repentance. The servants of God ought never to lay aside this disposition, which would lead them to endeavor to do good even to the reprobate, if that were possible. (2Ti 2:25.)

This passage ought to yield abundant consolation to godly teachers; for when we think that we are speaking to the deaf, we become faint, and are tempted to give up all exertion, and to say, “What am I about? I am beating the air.” Yet the Prophet does not cease to exhort those in whom he perceived no ground of comfortable hope; and while he stands like one astonished at this destruction of the people, he nevertheless addresses those whom he sees going to ruin. At the same time we must observe that, however obstinate the ungodly may be, we must pronounce vengeance against them; and though they refuse and gnaw the bridle, yet, that they may be left without excuse, we must always summon them to the judgment-seat of God.

I consider the כי ( ki) to mean surely; 39 for this signification is more suitable, because he breaks off the exhortation which he had begun, and addresses God. And when he again calls them the house of Jacob, this is added for the purpose of imparting greater vehemence, as is usually done in a moving discourse; as if he had said, “This holy nation, which God had chosen, is now forsaken.”

Because they are replenished from the East As the Hebrew word קדם ( kadem) sometimes denotes the east, and sometimes antiquity, it may be interpreted to mean that they were filled with ancient manners; because they had again brought into use those superstitions by which the land of Canaan was formerly infected. For we know that the prophets often reproach the nation of Israel with resembling the Canaanites more than they resembled Abraham and the rest of the holy fathers. And, indeed, because they had been brought into the possession of this land, when the ancient inhabitants had been driven out, in order that it might be cleansed from its pollution, and afterwards devoted to holiness, the refusal to change their wicked customs involved a twofold ingratitude. But as the other meaning — from the East — has been more generally adopted, I have chosen to retain it; though even in this view the commentators differ, for some consider the letter מ ( mem) to denote comparison, and מקדם ( mikkedem) to denote more than the inhabitants of thee East, while others adopt the simpler, and, as I think, the more correct view, that they were filled with the east, that is, with the vices which they had contracted from that quarter; for wicked imitation is amazingly contagious, and nothing is more natural than that corruptions should glide from one place into another more distant.

And with divinations, like the Philistines This clause explains the former more fully; for under divinations he includes, by synecdoche, the impostures of Satan to which heathen nations were addicted. The Prophet therefore means that they now differ in no respect from the Philistines, though God had separated them from that people by the privilege of his adoption; and this was sufficient to bring upon them the severest condemnation, that they had forgotten their calling, and polluted themselves with the corrupted and ungodly customs of the Gentiles. Hence it appears that to sin by the example of another contributes nothing to alleviate the guilt.

And have delighted in the children of strangers The last part of the verse is interpreted in various ways; because the phrase, the children of strangers, is viewed by some metaphorically, as denoting laws and customs; while others regard them as referring to marriages; because, by marrying indiscriminately women of foreign extraction, they had mingled their seed, so that there were many illegitimate children. Jerome gives a harsher exposition, that they polluted themselves by wicked lusts contrary to nature. For my own part, I have no doubt that by the children of strangers are meant foreign nations, and not figuratively the laws themselves. The crime charged against them by the Prophet therefore is, that, by endeavoring to please the Gentiles, they entangled themselves in their vices, and thus preferred not only mortal men, but wicked men, to God. He says that they delighted, because the desire or delight of wicked imitation effaced from their hearts the love of God and of sound doctrine.

TSK: Isa 2:6 - -- Therefore : Deu 31:16, Deu 31:17; 2Ch 15:2, 2Ch 24:20; Lam 5:20; Rom 11:1, Rom 11:2, Rom 11:20 from the east : or, more than the east, Num 23:7 and ar...

Therefore : Deu 31:16, Deu 31:17; 2Ch 15:2, 2Ch 24:20; Lam 5:20; Rom 11:1, Rom 11:2, Rom 11:20

from the east : or, more than the east, Num 23:7

and are : Isa 8:19, Isa 47:12, Isa 47:13; Exo 22:18; Lev 19:31, Lev 20:6; Deu 18:10-14; 1Ch 10:13

and they : Exo 34:16; Num 25:1, Num 25:2; Deu 21:11-13; 1Ki 11:1, 1Ki 11:2; Neh 13:23; Psa 106:35; Jer 10:2

please themselves in : or, abound with, etc

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Isa 2:6 - -- Therefore - The prophet proceeds in this and the following verses, to state the reasons of their calamities, and of the judgments that had come...

Therefore - The prophet proceeds in this and the following verses, to state the reasons of their calamities, and of the judgments that had come upon them. Those judgments he traces to the crimes which he enumerates - crimes growing chiefly out of great commercial prosperity, producing pride, luxury, and idolatry.

Thou hast forsaken - The address is changed from the exhortation to the house of Jacob Isa 2:5 to God, as is frequently the case in the writings of Isaiah. It indicates a state where the mind is full of the subject, and where it expresses itself in a rapid and hurried manner.

Hast forsaken - Hast withdrawn thy protection, and given them over to the calamities and judgments which had come upon them.

They be replenished - Hebrew, They are "full."That is, these things abound.

From the East - Margin, "More than the East."The meaning of the expression it is not easy to determine. The word translated "East," קדם qedem denotes also "antiquity,"or that which is "of old,"as well as the East. Hence, the Septuagint renders it, ‘ their land is, as of old, filled.’ The Chaldee, ‘ their land is filled with idols as at the beginning.’ Either idea will suit the passage; though our translation more nearly accords with the Hebrew than the others. The "East,"that is, Arabia, Persia, Chaldea, etc., was the country where astrology, soothsaying, and divination particularly abounded; see Dan 2:2; Deu 18:9-11.

And are soothsayers - Our word "soothsayers"means "foretellers, prognosticators,"persons who pretend to predict future events "without inspiration,"differing in this from true prophets. What the Hebrew word means, it is not so easy to determine. The word עננים ‛one nı̂ym may be derived from ענן ‛ânân , "a cloud"- and then would denote those who augur from the appearance of the clouds, a species of divination from certain changes observed in the sky; compare Lev 19:26 : ‘ Neither shall ye - observe times.’ 2Ki 21:6. This species of divination was expressly forbidden; see Deu 18:10-12 : ‘ There shall not be found among you anyone that useth divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter,’ etc. Or the word may be derived from עין ‛ayin , "an eye,"and then it will denote those who fascinate, enchant, or bewitch by the eye. It is probable that the word includes "augury, necromancy, and witchcraft,"in general - all which were expressly forbidden by the law of Moses; Deu 18:10-12.

Like the Philistines - The Philistines occupied the land in the southwest part of Palestine. The Septuagint uses the word "foreigners"here, as they do generally, instead of the Philistines.

And they please themselves - The word used here - שׂפק s'âphaq - means literally "to clap the hands"in token of joy. It may also mean, "to join the hands, to shake hands,"and then it will signify that they "joined hands"with foreigners; that is, they made compacts or entered into alliances with them contrary to the law of Moses. The Septuagint seems to understand it of unlawful marriages with the women of surrounding nations - τέκνα πολλὰ ἀλλόφυλλα ἐγενήθη αὐτοῖς tekna polla allophula egenēthē autois ; compare Neh 13:23. It means probably, in general, that they entered into improper alliances, whether they were military, matrimonial, or commercial, with the surrounding nations. The words "children of strangers"may mean, with the descendants of the foreigners with whom Moses forbade any alliances. The Jews were to be a separate and special people, and, in order to this, it was necessary to forbid all such foreign alliances; Exo 23:31-32; Exo 34:12-15; Psa 106:3, Psa 106:5; Ezr 9:1-15,

Poole: Isa 2:6 - -- Therefore for the following reasons. Or, but, as this particle is oft used. But why do I persuade the Israelites to receive the light of the gospel? ...

Therefore for the following reasons. Or, but, as this particle is oft used. But why do I persuade the Israelites to receive the light of the gospel? my labour is in vain. I foresee they will refuse it; and God, for their many and great sins, will give them up to apostacy and infidelity.

Thou hast forsaken wilt certainly forsake and reject. The body of that nation.

They be replenished from the east their land is full of the impious, and superstitious, and idolatrous manners of the Eastern nations, the Syrians and Chaldeans.

Are soothsayers: these undertook to discover secret things, and to foretell future contingent things, by the superstitious observation of the stars, or clouds, or birds, or other ways of divination, which God had severely forbidden. See Lev 19:26 . Like the Philistines, who are infamous for those practices; of which see one instance 1Sa 6:2 . They please themselves; they delight in their manners, and company, and conversation, making leagues, and friendships, and marriages with them.

In the children of strangers either,

1. In the children begotten by them upon strange women; or rather,

2. In strangers, as this phrase is used, Neh 9:2 Isa 60:10 , and elsewhere.

Haydock: Isa 2:6 - -- Jacob. Thus the converts address God, (Haydock) or the prophet give the reasons of the subversion of the ten tribes. --- Filled. Consecrated as p...

Jacob. Thus the converts address God, (Haydock) or the prophet give the reasons of the subversion of the ten tribes. ---

Filled. Consecrated as priests. ---

Children. Imitating idolatrous nations, (Calmet) and marrying with them, (Calmet; Septuagint; Theodoret) or even giving way to unnatural sins. (St. Jerome) (Menochius) ---

The Jews were not utterly cast off till they had put Christ to death. His Church shall never perish. (Worthington)

Gill: Isa 2:6 - -- Therefore thou hast forsaken thy people, the house of Jacob,.... These words contain a reason of the divine conduct, in calling the Gentiles, and reje...

Therefore thou hast forsaken thy people, the house of Jacob,.... These words contain a reason of the divine conduct, in calling the Gentiles, and rejecting the Jews, because of the sins of the latter hereafter mentioned; though some, as the Targum and R. Moses, refer this to the Israelites; and read, "because ye have forsaken", &c. and interpret it of their forsaking the Lord, his worship, and his law. What is hereafter said does not agree with the Jews, literally understood, neither in the times of Isaiah, nor when they returned from Babylon, nor in the times of Christ, nor since the destruction of Jerusalem, or in the latter day, a little before their conversion; for after the Babylonish captivity they were not given to idolatry, nor did they abound in riches, and much less since their dispersion among the nations; nor will this be their case in the latter day: wherefore Kimchi applies the whole to the times of Solomon, when the land abounded with gold and silver, with horses and chariots, and with idolatry also, in the latter part of his life: but it seems best to interpret this of antichrist and his followers, who call themselves the people of God, and the house of Jacob, say they are Jews, but are not, and are of the synagogue of Satan; and are therefore rejected of the Lord, and will be given up to utter ruin and destruction, for the evils found in them, hereafter charged with.

Because they be replenished from the east, or "more than the east" s; than the eastern people, the Syrians and Chaldeans; that is, were more filled with witchcrafts and sorceries than they, as Kimchi explains it; of the sorceries of the Romish antichrist, see Rev 9:21 the words may be rendered, "because they be full from of old time" t; or, as of old, or more than they were of old; namely, fuller of idols than formerly; so the Targum paraphrases it,

"because your land is full of idols, as of old;''

and so Rome Papal is as full of idols, or fuller, than Rome Pagan was. Some, as Aben Ezra, understand this of their being filled with the wisdom of the children of the east, 1Ki 4:30 and others of the riches of the east:

and are soothsayers like the Philistines: who were a people given to divination and soothsaying, 1Sa 6:2 and some of the popes of Rome have studied the black art, and by such wicked means have got into the Papal chair; for under this may be included all evil arts and fallacious methods, by which they have deceived themselves and others:

and they please themselves in the children of strangers; being brought into their convents, monasteries, and nunneries; the priests and nuns vowing celibacy and virginity, and contenting themselves with the children of others: or they love strange flesh, delight in sodomitical practices, and unnatural lusts with boys and men; wherefore Rome is called Sodom and Egypt, Rev 11:8 or they content and delight themselves in the laws, customs, rites, ceremonies, and doctrines of other nations; many of the Gentile notions and practices being introduced into the faith and worship of the church of Rome; wherefore the Papists go by the name of Gentiles, Rev 11:2. The Targum is,

"and they walk in the laws of the people,''

or study strange sciences, and not the statutes and laws of God; so some interpret it, as Ben Melech observes, and who also mentions another sense some give, that they please themselves in images they renew daily.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Isa 2:6 Heb “and with the children of foreigners they [?].” The precise meaning of the final word is uncertain. Some take this verb (I ש...

Geneva Bible: Isa 2:6 Therefore thou ( m ) hast forsaken thy people the house of Jacob, because they are ( n ) filled [with customs] from the east, and [are] soothsayers li...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Isa 2:1-22 - --1 Isaiah prophesies the coming of Christ's kingdom.6 Wickedness is the cause of God's forsaking.10 He exhorts to fear, because of the powerful effects...

MHCC: Isa 2:1-9 - --The calling of the Gentiles, the spread of the gospel, and that far more extensive preaching of it yet to come, are foretold. Let Christians strengthe...

Matthew Henry: Isa 2:6-9 - -- The calling in of the Gentiles was accompanied with the rejection of the Jews; it was their fall, and the diminishing of them, that was the riches ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 2:6 - -- "For Thou hast rejected Thy people, the house of Jacob; for they are filled with things from the east, and are conjurors like the Philistines; and ...

Constable: Isa 1:1--5:30 - --I. introduction chs. 1--5 The relationship of chapters 1-5 to Isaiah's call in chapter 6 is problematic. Do the ...

Constable: Isa 2:1--4:6 - --B. The problem with Israel chs. 2-4 This second major segment of the introduction to the book (chs. 1-5)...

Constable: Isa 2:5--4:2 - --2. God's discipline of Israel 2:5-4:1 In contrast to the hopeful tone of the sections that prece...

Constable: Isa 2:6-9 - --The cause of the problem: self-sufficiency 2:6-9 Several facets of Israel's national life, all evidences of self-sufficiency rather than trust in Yahw...

Guzik: Isa 2:1-22 - --Isaiah 2 - Hope And Fear A. The hope of the Messiah's reign. 1. (1) A word concerning Judah and Jerusalem. The word that Isaiah the son of Amoz sa...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Isaiah (Book Introduction) 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 (Outline) 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 (Book Introduction) 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 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Isa 2:1, Isaiah prophesies the coming of Christ’s kingdom; Isa 2:6, Wickedness is the cause of God’s forsaking; Isa 2:10, He exhorts ...

Poole: Isaiah (Book Introduction) 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 2 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 2 A prophecy of Christ’ s kingdom, and the calling of the Gentiles, Isa 2:1-5 ; and rejection of the Jews for their idolatry and pride...

MHCC: Isaiah (Book Introduction) 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 2 (Chapter Introduction) (Isa 2:1-9) The conversion of the Gentiles, Description of the sinfulness of Israel. (Isa 2:10-22) The awful punishment of unbelievers.

Matthew Henry: Isaiah (Book Introduction) 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 2 (Chapter Introduction) With this chapter begins a new sermon, which is continued in the two following chapters. The subject of this discourse is Judah and Jerusalem (Isa ...

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

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

Gill: Isaiah (Book Introduction) 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 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH 2 This chapter contains a vision or prophecy of the enlargement of Christ's kingdom and interest, and of the glory of his ch...

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