
Text -- Isaiah 27:11-13 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
That there may be no hopes of their recovery.

He mentions women, because the men would be destroyed.

Wesley: Isa 27:11 - -- They know not the things which concerns their peace, but they blindly and wilfully go on in sin.
They know not the things which concerns their peace, but they blindly and wilfully go on in sin.

Wesley: Isa 27:11 - -- Thus he overthrows their conceit that God would never destroy the work of his own hands.
Thus he overthrows their conceit that God would never destroy the work of his own hands.

Wesley: Isa 27:12 - -- It is a metaphor from grain which was beaten out with a rod or staff, and then carefully gathered and laid up.
It is a metaphor from grain which was beaten out with a rod or staff, and then carefully gathered and laid up.

Wesley: Isa 27:12 - -- From Euphrates to the Nile, which were the two borders of the land of promise. All the Israelites who are left in the land.
From Euphrates to the Nile, which were the two borders of the land of promise. All the Israelites who are left in the land.

Which signifies, God's exact care of them.

Wesley: Isa 27:13 - -- God shall summon them altogether by sound of trumpet, by an eminent call of his providence. He alludes to the custom of calling the Israelites togethe...
God shall summon them altogether by sound of trumpet, by an eminent call of his providence. He alludes to the custom of calling the Israelites together with trumpets.
So the Jews are called (Rom 11:17, Rom 11:19-20).

JFB: Isa 27:11 - -- Burn them as fuel; "women" are specified, as probably it was their office to collect fuel and kindle the fire for cooking.
Burn them as fuel; "women" are specified, as probably it was their office to collect fuel and kindle the fire for cooking.

JFB: Isa 27:12 - -- Restoration of the Jews from their dispersion, described under the image of fruits shaken from trees and collected.
Restoration of the Jews from their dispersion, described under the image of fruits shaken from trees and collected.

JFB: Isa 27:12 - -- On the confines of Palestine and Egypt (Num 34:5; Jos 15:4, Jos 15:47), now Wady-el-Arish, Jehovah's vineyard, Israel, extended according to His purpo...

Gathered most carefully, not merely as a nation, but as individuals.

JFB: Isa 27:13 - -- Image from the trumpets blown on the first day of the seventh month to summon the people to a holy convocation (Lev 23:24). Antitypically, the gospel ...
Image from the trumpets blown on the first day of the seventh month to summon the people to a holy convocation (Lev 23:24). Antitypically, the gospel trumpet (Rev 11:15; Rev 14:6) which the Jews shall hearken to in the last days (Zec 12:10; Zec 13:1). As the passover in the first month answers to Christ's crucifixion, so the day of atonement and the idea of "salvation" connected with the feast of tabernacles in the same seventh month, answer to the crowning of "redemption" at His second coming; therefore redemption is put last in 1Co 1:30.

JFB: Isa 27:13 - -- Whither the ten tribes had been carried; Babylonia is mainly meant, to which Assyria at that time belonged; the two tribes were restored, and some of ...
Whither the ten tribes had been carried; Babylonia is mainly meant, to which Assyria at that time belonged; the two tribes were restored, and some of the ten accompanied them. However, "Assyria" is designedly used to point ultimately to the future restoration of the ten fully, never yet accomplished (Jer 3:18).

JFB: Isa 27:13 - -- Whither many had fled at the Babylonish captivity (Jer 41:17-18). Compare as to the future restoration, Isa 11:11-12, Isa 11:16; Isa 51:9-16 ("Rahab" ...
Whither many had fled at the Babylonish captivity (Jer 41:17-18). Compare as to the future restoration, Isa 11:11-12, Isa 11:16; Isa 51:9-16 ("Rahab" being Egypt).
The twenty-eighth through thirty-third chapters form almost one continuous prophecy concerning the destruction of Ephraim, the impiety and folly of Judah, the danger of their league with Egypt, the straits they would be reduced to by Assyria, from which Jehovah would deliver them on their turning to Him; the twenty-eighth chapter refers to the time just before the sixth year of Hezekiak's reign, the rest not very long before his fourteenth year.
Clarke: Isa 27:11 - -- The boughs thereof "Her boughs"- קציריה ketsireyha , MS. and Vulg.; that is, the boughs of the vineyard, referring still to the subject of th...
The boughs thereof "Her boughs"-
The scarcity of fuel, especially wood, in most parts of the east is so great, that they supply it with every thing capable of burning; cow-dung dried, roots, parings of fruit, withered stalks of herbs and flowers; see Mat 6:21-30. Vine-twigs are particularly mentioned as used for fuel in dressing their food, by D’ Arvieux; La Roque, Palestine, p. 198. Ezekiel says, in his parable of the vine, used figuratively for the people of God, as the vineyard is here: "Shall wood be taken thereof to do any work? or will men take a pin of it to hang any vessel thereon? Behold, it is cast into the fire for fuel; "Eze 15:3, Eze 15:4. "If a man abide not in one, "saith our Lord, "he is cast forth as a branch of the vine and is withered; and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned;"Joh 15:6. They employed women and children to gather these things, and they laid them up in store for use. The dressing and pruning their vines afforded a good supply of the last sort of fuel; but the prophet says that the vines themselves of the beloved vineyard shall be blasted, withered, and broken, and the women shall come and gather them up, and carry away the whole of them to make their fires for domestic uses. See Harmer’ s Observations, vol. i., p. 254, etc.

Clarke: Isa 27:12 - -- The channel of the river - The river Sabbation, beyond which the Israelites were carried captive. - Kimchi.
The channel of the river - The river Sabbation, beyond which the Israelites were carried captive. - Kimchi.

Clarke: Isa 27:13 - -- The great trumpet shall be blown - Does not this refer to the time spoken of by our Lord, Mat 24:31 : He shall send forth his angels - the preachers...
The great trumpet shall be blown - Does not this refer to the time spoken of by our Lord, Mat 24:31 : He shall send forth his angels - the preachers of his Gospel with a great sound of a trumpet - the earnest invitation to be saved by Jesus Christ; and shall gather his elect - the Jews, his ancient chosen people, from the four winds - from all parts of the habitable globe in which they have been dispersed
In this prophet there are several predictions relative to the conversion of Egypt to the true faith, which have not yet been fulfilled, and which must be fulfilled, for the truth of God cannot fail. Should Egypt ever succeed in casting off the Ottoman yoke, and fully establish its independence, it is most likely that the Gospel of Christ would have a speedy entrance into it; and, according to these prophecies, a wide and permanent diffusion. At present the Mohammedan power is a genuine antichrist. This also the Lord will remove in due time.
Calvin: Isa 27:11 - -- 11.When its harvest shall wither 207 Some think that the Prophet has in his eye the metaphor of a vineyard, which he employed at the beginning of the...
11.When its harvest shall wither 207 Some think that the Prophet has in his eye the metaphor of a vineyard, which he employed at the beginning of the chapter, and therefore they translate
The women coming shall burn it When he says that “women shall come,” he means that God will have no need of robust soldiers to execute his judgment, and that he will only make use of the agency of women. This exhibits in a still stronger light the disgracefulness of the punishment, for he threatens that the calamity shall also be accompanied by disgrace; because it is more shameful and humiliating to be plundered by “women,” who are unused to war, than by men.
For it is a people of no understanding At length he assigns the reason of so heavy a calamity. At first sight it might appear to be excessively harsh that the Lord should permit the people whom he had chosen to be wretchedly tormented and scattered, and not to render them any assistance; for it is inconsistent with his kindness and fatherly love which he bears towards them. But the Prophet shews that God had good reason for punishing the Jews with such severity; for they were destitute of knowledge and sound “understanding.”
Nor is it without reason that he pronounces ignorance to have been the source of all evils; for since “the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom,” (Pro 1:7; Psa 111:10,) they who despise God and obey the wicked passions of their flesh are justly condemned by the Spirit of God as blind and mad. And yet such ignorance does not at all excuse us or lessen the guilt of our wickedness; for they who sin are conscious of their sinfulness, though they are blinded by their lust. Wickedness and ignorance are therefore closely connected, but the connection is of such a nature that ignorance proceeds from the sinful disposition of the mind. Hence it comes that “ignorance,” or “ignorances,” is the general name given by the Hebrew writers to every kind of sin, and hence also that saying of Moses,
“O that they were wise and understood!”
(Deu 32:29.)
Any man will easily perceive this, if he consider how great is the power of evil passions to trouble us; for when we have been deprived of the light of doctrine, and are void of understanding, the devil drives us as it were to madness, so that we do not dread the arm of God, and have no respect for his holy word.
Therefore their Maker will not have compassion on them For the purpose of still heightening their terror, he at length takes away all hope of pardon; for even if a remnant was preserved, the wrath of God did not on that account cease to rage against the multitude at large. The Prophet here calls God the Maker and Creator of Israel, not in the same manner that he is called the Creator of heaven and earth, (Gen 1:1,) but inasmuch as he has formed his Church by the Spirit of regeneration. In like manner Paul also declares, that in that sense we are

Calvin: Isa 27:12 - -- 12.And yet it shall come to pass on that day He softens the harshness of the former statement; for it was a dreadful judgment of God, that the people...
12.And yet it shall come to pass on that day He softens the harshness of the former statement; for it was a dreadful judgment of God, that the people were deprived of all hope of mercy and favor. The particle
That Jehovah shall thrash The Prophet speaks metaphorically; for he compares the gathering of the Church to the “thrashing” of wheat, by which the grain is separated from the chaff. The meaning of the metaphor is, that the people were so completely overwhelmed by that captivity that they appeared to be nothing else than grain concealed or scattered here and there under the chaff. It was necessary that the Lord should “thrash,” as with a fan, what was concealed amidst the confused mass; so that this gathering was justly compared to “thrashing.”
From the channel of the river to the river of Egypt By this he means Euphrates and the Nile; for the people were banished, partly into Chaldea or Assyria, and partly into Egypt. Many fled into Egypt, while others were carried captive into Babylon. He therefore foretells that the Lord will gather his people, not only from Chaldea, and from the whole of Mesopotamia, but also from Egypt.
And you shall be gathered one by one

Calvin: Isa 27:13 - -- 13.It shall also come to pass in that day This is the explanation of the former verse. He speaks metaphorically, and shews that so great will be the ...
13.It shall also come to pass in that day This is the explanation of the former verse. He speaks metaphorically, and shews that so great will be the power of God, that he will easily bring back his people. As kings assemble large armies by the sound of a trumpet, so he shews that it will be easy for the Lord to gather his people, on whom prophecy had not less efficacy than the trumpet by which soldiers are mustered.
And they shall come who were perishing He calls them perishing, because they were miserably scattered, and appeared to be very near destruction, without any hope of being restored. The enemies, while their monarchy lasted, would never have permitted their captives to return, nor had they led them into banishment in a distant country with any other design than that of gradually casting into oblivion the name of Israel.
And who had been scattered in the land of Egypt What he adds about Egypt contains a more remarkable testimony of pardon, namely, that those who fled into Egypt, though they did not deserve this favor, shall be gathered. They had offended God in two respects, as Jeremiah plainly shews; first, because they were obstinate and rebellious; and, secondly, because they had refused to obey the revelation, (Jer 28:10;) for they ought to have submitted to the yoke of the Babylonians rather than flee into Egypt in opposition to the command of God.
And shall worship Jehovah in the holy mountain At length, he describes the result of their deliverance, that the Jews, having returned from captivity into their country, may again worship God their deliverer in a pure and lawful manner. By the mountain he means the temple and sacrifices. This was indeed accomplished under Darius, but the Prophet undoubtedly intended to extend this prophecy farther; for that restoration was a kind of dark foreshadowing of the deliverance which they obtained through Christ, at whose coming the sound of the spiritual trumpet, that is, of the gospel, was heard, not only in Assyria or Egypt, but in the most distant parts of the world. Then were the people of God gathered, to flow together to Mount Zion, that is, to the Church. We know that this mode of expression is frequently employed by the prophets when they intend to denote the true worship of God, and harmony in religion and godliness; for they accommodated themselves to the usages of the people that they might be better understood. We know also that the gospel proceeded out of Zion; but on this subject we have spoken fully at the second chapter. 209
TSK: Isa 27:11 - -- the boughs : Psa 80:15, Psa 80:16; Eze 15:2-8, Eze 20:47; Mat 3:10; Joh 15:6
for it is : Isa 1:3, Isa 44:18-20; Deu 4:6, Deu 32:28, Deu 32:29; Jer 4:2...
the boughs : Psa 80:15, Psa 80:16; Eze 15:2-8, Eze 20:47; Mat 3:10; Joh 15:6
for it is : Isa 1:3, Isa 44:18-20; Deu 4:6, Deu 32:28, Deu 32:29; Jer 4:22, Jer 5:4, Jer 5:5, Jer 5:21, Jer 5:22, Jer 8:7; Hos 4:6; Mat 13:15, Mat 13:19; Rom 1:28, Rom 1:31
therefore : Isa 43:1, Isa 43:7, Isa 44:20,Isa 44:21, Isa 44:24; Gen 6:6, Gen 6:7; Deu 32:18-25; 2Ch 36:16, 2Ch 36:17; Psa 106:40; Eze 9:10; 1Th 2:16; 2Th 1:8, 2Th 1:9; Jam 2:13

TSK: Isa 27:12 - -- beat off : Isa 11:11-16, Isa 24:13-16, Isa 56:8; Gen 15:18; Psa 68:22, Psa 72:8
ye shall be : Deu 30:3, Deu 30:4; Neh 1:9; Jer 3:14; Amo 9:9; Mat 18:1...
beat off : Isa 11:11-16, Isa 24:13-16, Isa 56:8; Gen 15:18; Psa 68:22, Psa 72:8
ye shall be : Deu 30:3, Deu 30:4; Neh 1:9; Jer 3:14; Amo 9:9; Mat 18:12-14; Luk 15:4; Joh 6:37; Joh 10:16

TSK: Isa 27:13 - -- And it : Isa 2:11
the great : Isa 18:3; Lev 25:9; Num 10:2-4; 1Ch 15:24; Psa 47:5, Psa 81:3, Psa 89:15; Zec 9:13-16; Mat 24:31; Luk 4:18; Rom 10:18; 1...
And it : Isa 2:11
the great : Isa 18:3; Lev 25:9; Num 10:2-4; 1Ch 15:24; Psa 47:5, Psa 81:3, Psa 89:15; Zec 9:13-16; Mat 24:31; Luk 4:18; Rom 10:18; 1Th 4:16; Rev 8:2, Rev 8:6-13; Rev 9:1, Rev 9:14, Rev 10:7, Rev 11:15-18
and they : Isa 11:16, Isa 19:23-25; 2Ki 17:6; Hos 9:3, Hos 11:11; Zec 10:8-12
the outcasts : Isa 11:12, Isa 16:3, Isa 16:4, Isa 56:8; Jer 43:7, Jer 44:28; Hos 8:13
and shall : Isa 2:3, Isa 25:6, Isa 66:18; Zec 14:16; Mal 1:11; Joh 4:21-24; Heb 12:22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Isa 27:11 - -- When the boughs thereof are withered - This is a further description of the desolation which would come upon Babylon. The idea is, that Babylon...
When the boughs thereof are withered - This is a further description of the desolation which would come upon Babylon. The idea is, that Babylon would be forsaken until the trees should grow and decay, and the branches should fall to be collected for burning. That is, the desolation should be entire, undisturbed, and long continued The idea of the desolation is, therefore, in this verse carried forward, and a new circumstance is introduced to make it more graphic and striking. Lowth, however, supposes that this refers to the vineyard, and to the fact that the vine-twigs are collected in the East from the scarcity of fuel for burning. But it seems to me that the obvious reference is to Babylon, and that it is an image of the great and prolonged desolation that was coming upon that city.
They shall be broken off - That is, by their own weight as they decay, or by the hands of those who come to collect them for fuel.
The women come - Probably it was the office mainly of the women to collect the fuel which might be necessary for culinary purposes. In eastern climates but little is needed; and that is collected of the twigs of vineyards, of withered stubble, straw, hay, dried roots, etc., wherever they can be found.
And set them on fire - That is, to burn them for fuel.
Of no understanding - Of no right views of God and his government - wicked, sinful Pro 6:32; Pro 18:2; Jer 5:21.

Barnes: Isa 27:12 - -- And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall beat off - The word which is used here ( חבט châbaṭ ) means properly "to...
And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall beat off - The word which is used here (
From the channel of the river - The river here undoubtedly refers to the river Euphrates (see the note at Isa 11:15).
Unto the stream of Egypt - The Nile. "And ye shall be gathered one by one."As the farmer collects his fruits one by one - collecting them carefully, and not leaving any. This means that God will not merely collect them as a nation, but as "individuals."He will see that none is overlooked, and that all shall be brought in safety to their land.

Barnes: Isa 27:13 - -- The great trumpet shall be blown - This verse is designed to describe in another mode the same fact as that stated in Isa 27:12, that Yahweh wo...
The great trumpet shall be blown - This verse is designed to describe in another mode the same fact as that stated in Isa 27:12, that Yahweh would re-collect his scattered people. The figure is derived from the trumpet which was blown to assemble a people for war (Grotius); or from the blowing of the trumpet on occasion of the great feasts and festivals of the Jews (Vitringa). The idea is, that God would summon the scattered people to return to their own land. The "way"in which this was done, or in which the will of God would be made known to them, is not specified. It is probable, however, that the reference here is to the decree of Cyrus Ezr 1:1, by which they were permitted to return to their own country.
Which were ready to perish - Who were reduced in numbers, and in power, and who were ready to be annihilated under their accumulated and long-continued trials.
In the land of Assyria - The ten tribes were carried away into Assyria 2Ki 17:6; and it is probable that many of the other two tribes were also in that land. A portion of the ten tribes would also be re-collected, and would return with the others to the land of their fathers. Assyria also constituted a considerable part of the kingdom of the Chaldeans, and the name Assyria may be given here to that country in general.
And the outcasts - Those who had fled in consternation to Egypt and to other places when these calamities were coming upon the nation (see Jer 41:17-18; Jer 42:15-22).
And shall worship the Lord - Their temple shall be rebuilt; their city shall be restored; and in the place where their fathers worshipped shall they also again adore the living God. This closes the prophecy which was commenced in Isa. 24; and the design of the whole is to comfort the Jews with the assurance, that though they were to be made captive in a distant land, yet they would be again restored to the land of their fathers, and again worship God there. It is almost needless to say that this prediction was completely fulfilled by the return of the Jews to their own country under the decree of Cyrus.
Poole: Isa 27:11 - -- When the boughs thereof are withered when they shall begin to wither, as they will when they are thus gnawed and cropped by cattle.
They shall be br...
When the boughs thereof are withered when they shall begin to wither, as they will when they are thus gnawed and cropped by cattle.
They shall be broken off that there may be no hopes nor possibility of their recovery.
The women he mentions women, either because it is their usual work in the country to make fires, and to gather fuel for them, or to signify that the men should be generally destroyed.
It is a people of no understanding they do not understand either me or themselves, either my word or works; they know not the things which concern their own peace and happiness, but, like brute beasts made to be destroyed, they blindly and wilfully go on in those courses which will bring them to certain ruin. He that made them ; both as they are creatures, and as they are his people; for this also is expressed by making or forming, as Psa 100:3 102:18 149:2 . Thus he overthroweth their false and presumptuous conceits, that God would never destroy the work of his own hands, nor the seed of Abraham his friend for ever; and plainly declareth the contrary.

Poole: Isa 27:12 - -- Shall beat off or, shall beat out ; which is not meant in a way of punishment, which is rather designed by threshing , as Isa 21:10 25:10 , than by...
Shall beat off or, shall beat out ; which is not meant in a way of punishment, which is rather designed by threshing , as Isa 21:10 25:10 , than by beating; but as an act of mercy, as is evident from the following clause of this, and from the next verse. It is a metaphor from some grains which were beaten out with a rod or staff, of which see Isa 28:27,28 , and then were carefully gathered and laid up, for the use of man.
From the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt from Euphrates to Nilus, which were the two borders of the Land of Promise, Jos 1:4 13:3 . All the Israelites which are left in the land; which are here opposed to those of them that are dispersed into foreign parts, such as Assyria and Egypt.
Ye shall be gathered one by one which signifies either the smallness of the remnant of that numerous people; or rather God’ s exact and singular care of them, that not one of them should be lost.

Poole: Isa 27:13 - -- The great trumpet which may be heard even to the remotest parts of the earth. God shall summon them all together as it were by sound of trumpet, to w...
The great trumpet which may be heard even to the remotest parts of the earth. God shall summon them all together as it were by sound of trumpet, to wit, by an eminent call or act of his providence on their behalf. He alludes to the custom of calling the Israelites, together with trumpets; of which see Num 10:2,3 .
The land of Assyria where the ten tribes were carried captive. The land of Egypt, where many of the Jews were, as is manifest both from Scripture, as Jer 43:7 44:28 Hos 8:13 Zec 10:10 , and from other authors.
PBC -> Isa 27:13
PBC: Isa 27:13 - -- See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GREAT TRUMPET 1852
See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GOSPEL TRUMPET 1858
See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GREAT TRUMPET 1852
See Philpot: THE BLOWING OF THE GOSPEL TRUMPET 1858
Haydock: Isa 27:11 - -- Women. The princes shall be weak and irresolute. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "Hither, ye women, coming from the shew. For it is not an intelligent p...
Women. The princes shall be weak and irresolute. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "Hither, ye women, coming from the shew. For it is not an intelligent people."

Haydock: Isa 27:12 - -- River Euphrates, even to the Nile. (Haydock) ---
Nabuchodonosor laid waste all the intermediate countries. Afterwards Cyrus gave the people libert...
River Euphrates, even to the Nile. (Haydock) ---
Nabuchodonosor laid waste all the intermediate countries. Afterwards Cyrus gave the people liberty. On the death of Cambyses, the nations were in consternation; and it was only during the peaceable reign of Darius that Israel returned, though not in a body, as the Jews had done twenty years before, chap. xxvi. (Calmet) ---
By one, into the Church of Christ, John xi. (Menochius)

Haydock: Isa 27:13 - -- Trumpet. The preaching of the Gospel for the conversion of the Jews. (Challoner)
Trumpet. The preaching of the Gospel for the conversion of the Jews. (Challoner)
Gill: Isa 27:11 - -- When the boughs thereof are withered, they shall be broken off,.... This city is compared to a tree, whose branches are not only gnawed and consumed b...
When the boughs thereof are withered, they shall be broken off,.... This city is compared to a tree, whose branches are not only gnawed and consumed by cattle, as in the former verse Isa 27:10; but which, in a hot dry summer, are withered and dried up, and so are easily broken, and are fit for nothing but the fire; hence it follows:
the women come and set them on fire; or "gather" them f in order to burn them; as is commonly done with withered branches, Joh 15:6 it may design the burning of the whore of Rome by the kings of the earth; for as antichrist is signified by a woman, so the ten kings that shall hate her, and burn her flesh with fire, may be signified by women; see Rev 17:16. The word here used signifies to illuminate, or give light, which is done when wood is set on fire; hence the Vulgate Latin renders it, "women coming, and teaching it"; and so the Targum,
"women shall come into the house of their gods, and teach them;''
as the woman Jezebel does, Rev 2:20 the former sense is best:
for it is a people of no understanding; or "understandings": that is, the people that inhabit the above city, they are sottish and stupid, have no understanding of God and divine things, of the Scriptures, and the doctrines of them; among whom this maxim obtains, that ignorance is the mother of devotion; they are under a judicial blindness, are given up to strong delusions to believe a lie, 2Th 2:10,
therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them; and he that formed them will show them no favour; but his wrath shall be poured out upon them to the uttermost, which will be fulfilled in the seven vials, and in the destruction of Rome, and the everlasting ruin of the worshippers of the man of sin; see Rev 16:1 no argument can be taken from men's being God's creatures and offspring, and from his being the former and maker of them, to their salvation; or because they are so, therefore shall be saved when they are sinful and sottish; for, being like brutes without understanding, they shall perish as they, without mercy.

Gill: Isa 27:12 - -- And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the song will be sung, Isa 27:2 when God will appear to have taken particular care of his church, and ...
And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the song will be sung, Isa 27:2 when God will appear to have taken particular care of his church, and is about to bring it into a flourishing condition; when its troubles and afflictions will come to an end, with a sanctified use of them; and when the city of Rome will be destroyed, and all the antichristian powers, then will be the conversion of the Jews; for antichrist stands in the way of that work:
that the Lord shall beat off; or "beat out" g; alluding either to the beating off of fruit from a tree, or to the beating out of grain from the ear; and signifies the separating of the Lord's people in the effectual calling from the rest of the world; as the fruit beaten off is separated from the tree, and corn beaten out is separated from the ear and chaff; for this beating off does not intend judgment, but mercy; and is done not by the rod of affliction, but by the rod of the Lord's strength sent out of Zion, even the Gospel, the power of God to salvation; which, in the ministration of it, should reach
from the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt; from the river Euphrates, on the banks of which was the city of Babylon, to the river Nile in Egypt, which were the limits and boundaries of the land of Israel, Deu 11:24 and in which places many Jews h were, or would be, as in the following verse Isa 27:13. The Septuagint version is,
"from the ditch of the river to Rhinocorura;''
which, Jerom says, is a town on the borders of Egypt and Palestine. The meaning is, that the Lord would find out his people, wherever they were, in those parts, and separate and call them by his grace, and gather them to himself, and to his church and people, as follows:
and ye shall be gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel; as fruit is gathered up, when beaten off of the tree; and the phrase "one by one" denotes either the fewness of them, and the gradual manner in which they will be gathered; or rather, since this does not so well suit with the conversion of the Jews, which will be of a nation at once, it may signify the completeness of this work, that they shall be everyone gathered, not one shall be left or lost, but all Israel shall be saved; or it may be also expressive of the conjunction of them, and union of them one to another, in the Gospel church state, into which they shall be gathered, as fruit beaten off, and gathered up, is laid together in a storehouse. To this sense agrees the Targum,
"ye shall be brought near one to another, O ye children of Israel i.''

Gill: Isa 27:13 - -- And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the Lord is about to do the above things, and in order to it. The Talmudists k apply this text to the ...
And it shall come to pass in that day,.... When the Lord is about to do the above things, and in order to it. The Talmudists k apply this text to the world to come, or times of the Messiah, when the ten tribes shall be returned:
that the great trumpet shall be blown; meaning not the edict or proclamation of Cyrus, but the ministration of the Gospel, called a "trumpet", in allusion to those that were ordered by Moses to be made for the congregation of Israel, Num 10:1, or to the jubilee trumpet, Lev 25:9 or with respect to any trumpet giving a musical sound; the Gospel being a joyful sound, a sound of love, grace, and mercy through Christ, of peace, pardon, righteousness, and salvation by him; and which may be called a "great" one, the author of it, God, being great; and it is the effect of great love, and the produce of great wisdom; it proclaims and publishes great things, great promises, great truths, and a great salvation; it gives a great sound, which has and will again go into all the world, and reach to the ends of the earth; and has been, and will be, attended with great power; the "blowing" of it intends the ministry of the word, which to perform aright requires ability and skill; and here it respects the ministration of it in the latter day, when this Gospel trumpet will be blown more clearly, and without any jar, discord, and confusion; and more loudly, openly, and publicly; and more effectually, and to greater purpose:
and they shall come which were ready to perish in the land of Assyria, and the outcasts in the land of Egypt; all mankind are in a perishing condition, but all are not sensible of it; some are, and they become so through the preaching of the word, attended with the power and Spirit of God; whereby they are convinced of sin, and of their lost estate by nature; their consciences are loaded with guilt, their souls are filled with a sense of wrath; they have a sight of sin, but not of a Saviour from it, or of the pardon of it; they have a view of a broken law, which curses and condemns, and of injured justice brandishing its sword against them, but see they have no righteousness to satisfy one or the other; and find themselves in a starving condition, ready to perish with hunger; and are like the wretched infant "cast out" into the open field, to the "loathing" of its person: and these now, whether in Assyria or in Egypt, or wherever they are, the Gospel trumpet will reach them, and encourage them to come; and powerful and efficacious grace accompanying it will engage and cause them to "come" first to Christ as poor perishing sinners, and venture their souls on him for life and salvation; they shall come to him in a way of believing, for pardon, cleansing, rest, food, righteousness, and life; and then they shall come to his churches, and give up themselves unto them, to walk with them:
and shall worship the Lord in the holy mount at Jerusalem; in the Gospel church, signified frequently by Mount Zion and Jerusalem; see Heb 12:22 where the Jews shall come, when converted, and join themselves, and worship God internally and externally, in spirit and in truth: and it may be true of Mount Zion, and of Jerusalem, in a literal sense, which will be rebuilt, and inhabited by the Jews, and become a place of divine worship.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Isa 27:12 The Israelites will be freed from exile (likened to beating the olives off the tree) and then gathered (likened to collecting the olives).

NET Notes: Isa 27:13 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
Geneva Bible: Isa 27:11 When its boughs are withered, they shall be broken off: the ( l ) women come, [and] set them on fire: for it [is] a people of no understanding: theref...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:12 And it shall come to pass in that day, [that] the LORD shall gather from the channel of the ( m ) river to the stream of Egypt, and ye shall be gather...

Geneva Bible: Isa 27:13 And it shall come to pass in that day, [that] the great trumpet shall be ( n ) blown, and they shall come who were ready to perish in the land of Assy...

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; Isa 27:12-13
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...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 27:12-13 - --
But when Israel repents, the mercy of Jehovah will change all this. "And it will come to pass on that day, Jehovah will appoint a beating of corn f...
Constable -> Isa 7:1--39:8; Isa 13:1--35:10; Isa 24:1--27:13; Isa 27:1-13; Isa 27:2-11; Isa 27:12-13
Constable: Isa 7:1--39:8 - --III. Israel's crisis of faith chs. 7--39
This long section of the book deals with Israel's major decision in Isa...

Constable: Isa 13:1--35:10 - --B. God's sovereignty over the nations chs. 13-35
This major section of the book emphasizes the folly of ...

Constable: Isa 24:1--27:13 - --2. Divine victory over the nations chs. 24-27
This section of the text has similarities to the p...

Constable: Isa 27:1-13 - --The future regathering of God's people ch. 27
The recurrence of the phrase "in that day"...

Constable: Isa 27:2-11 - --The future blessing and former discipline of Israel 27:2-11
27:2 Isaiah, speaking for the Lord, announced that a delightful vineyard that produced win...
