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Text -- Isaiah 28:21-29 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Where he fought against the Philistines, 2Sa 5:20.
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Wesley: Isa 28:21 - -- Where he fought against the Canaanites, Jos 10:10, &c. and afterwards against the Philistines, 1Ch 14:16.
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Wesley: Isa 28:21 - -- For this work of bringing total destruction upon Israel, was contrary to the benignity of his own nature, and to the usual way of dealing with his peo...
For this work of bringing total destruction upon Israel, was contrary to the benignity of his own nature, and to the usual way of dealing with his people.
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Lest thereby you make the judgments of God sure and unavoidable.
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God hath assured me, that he will utterly destroy the people of Israel.
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Wesley: Isa 28:24 - -- The plowman doth not spend all his time in plowing the ground; but he has several times for several works. And so God has his times and seasons for se...
The plowman doth not spend all his time in plowing the ground; but he has several times for several works. And so God has his times and seasons for several works, and his providence is various at several times, and towards several people. Therefore those scoffing Israelites were guilty of great folly, in flattering themselves, because of God's long patience towards them; for God will certainly take a time to thresh, and break them with his judgments, as at present he plowed and harrowed them, and so prepared them for it by his threatenings.
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Which they used to do with a kind of harrow.
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That proportion of barley which he appointed.
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Heb. in his border; each seed in a several place.
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Wesley: Isa 28:27 - -- This then was made like a sledge shod with iron, which was drawn by men or beasts, over the sheafs of corn, to bruise them, and tear the grain out of ...
This then was made like a sledge shod with iron, which was drawn by men or beasts, over the sheafs of corn, to bruise them, and tear the grain out of them.
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Wesley: Isa 28:27 - -- A lower wheel than a cart wheel, but of the same form, upon which possibly the threshing instrument was drawn.
A lower wheel than a cart wheel, but of the same form, upon which possibly the threshing instrument was drawn.
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Wesley: Isa 28:28 - -- This was another way of threshing out the corn, by driving horses, or other cattle, over the sheaves to tread it.
This was another way of threshing out the corn, by driving horses, or other cattle, over the sheaves to tread it.
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Wesley: Isa 28:29 - -- This part of the husbandman's discretion. These words contain the application of the similitude. The husbandman manages his affairs with common discre...
This part of the husbandman's discretion. These words contain the application of the similitude. The husbandman manages his affairs with common discretion; but God governs the world, and his church, with wonderful wisdom: he is great and marvellous, both in the contrivance of things, and in the execution of them.
JFB: Isa 28:21 - -- In the valley of Rephaim (2Sa 5:18, 2Sa 5:20; 1Ch 14:11), there Jehovah, by David, broke forth as waters do, and made a breach among the Philistines, ...
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JFB: Isa 28:21 - -- As being against His own people; judgment is not what God delights in; it is, though necessary, yet strange to Him (Lam 3:33).
As being against His own people; judgment is not what God delights in; it is, though necessary, yet strange to Him (Lam 3:33).
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JFB: Isa 28:22 - -- Their Assyrian bondage (Isa 10:27); Judah was then tributary to Assyria; or, "lest your punishment be made still more severe" (Isa 24:22).
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JFB: Isa 28:23 - -- Calling attention to the following illustration from husbandry (Psa 49:1-2). As the husbandman does his different kinds of work, each in its right tim...
Calling attention to the following illustration from husbandry (Psa 49:1-2). As the husbandman does his different kinds of work, each in its right time and due proportion, so God adapts His measures to the varying exigencies of the several cases: now mercy, now judgments; now punishing sooner, now later (an answer to the scoff that His judgments, being put off so long, would never come at all, Isa 5:19); His object being not to destroy His people any more than the farmer's object in threshing is to destroy his crop; this vindicates God's "strange work" (Isa 28:21) in punishing His people. Compare the same image, Jer 24:6; Hos 2:23; Mat 3:12.
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JFB: Isa 28:24 - -- Emphatic; he is not always ploughing: he also "sows," and that, too, in accordance with sure rules (Isa 28:25).
Emphatic; he is not always ploughing: he also "sows," and that, too, in accordance with sure rules (Isa 28:25).
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Supply "always." Is he always harrowing?
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The "surface" of the ground: "made plain," or level, by harrowing.
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JFB: Isa 28:25 - -- Rather, "dill," or "fennel"; Nigella romana, with black seed, easily beaten out, used as a condiment and medicine in the East. So the Septuagint, "cum...
Rather, "dill," or "fennel"; Nigella romana, with black seed, easily beaten out, used as a condiment and medicine in the East. So the Septuagint, "cummin" was used in the same way.
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JFB: Isa 28:25 - -- Rather, plant the wheat in rows (for wheat was thought to yield the largest crop, by being planted sparingly [PLINY, Natural History, 18.21]); [MAURER...
Rather, plant the wheat in rows (for wheat was thought to yield the largest crop, by being planted sparingly [PLINY, Natural History, 18.21]); [MAURER]; "sow the wheat regularly" [HORSLEY]. But GESENIUS, like English Version, "fat," or "principal," that is, excellent wheat.
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Rather, "barley in its appointed place" [MAURER].
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Rather, "in its (the field's) border" [MAURER].
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JFB: Isa 28:27 - -- The husbandman uses the same discretion in threshing. The dill ("fitches") and cummin, leguminous and tender grains, are beaten out, not as wheat, &c....
The husbandman uses the same discretion in threshing. The dill ("fitches") and cummin, leguminous and tender grains, are beaten out, not as wheat, &c., with the heavy corn-drag ("threshing instrument"), but with "a staff"; heavy instruments would crush and injure the seed.
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JFB: Isa 28:27 - -- Two iron wheels armed with iron teeth, like a saw, joined together by a wooden axle. The "corn-drag" was made of three or four wooden cylinders, armed...
Two iron wheels armed with iron teeth, like a saw, joined together by a wooden axle. The "corn-drag" was made of three or four wooden cylinders, armed with iron teeth or flint stones fixed underneath, and joined like a sledge. Both instruments cut the straw for fodder as well as separated the corn.
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JFB: Isa 28:28 - -- Threshed with the corn-drag (as contrasted with dill and cummin, "beaten with the staff"), or, "trodden out" by the hoofs of cattle driven over it on ...
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JFB: Isa 28:28 - -- Rather, "but" [HORSLEY]; though the corn is threshed with the heavy instrument, yet he will not always be thus threshing it.
Rather, "but" [HORSLEY]; though the corn is threshed with the heavy instrument, yet he will not always be thus threshing it.
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"drive over it (continually) the wheel" [MAURER].
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Rather, "horses"; used to tread out corn.
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JFB: Isa 28:29 - -- The skill wherewith the husbandman duly adjusts his modes of threshing is given by God, as well as the skill (Isa 28:26) wherewith he tills and sows (...
The skill wherewith the husbandman duly adjusts his modes of threshing is given by God, as well as the skill (Isa 28:26) wherewith he tills and sows (Isa 28:24-25). Therefore He must also be able to adapt His modes of treatment to the several moral needs of His creatures. His object in sending tribulation (derived from the Latin tribulum, a "threshing instrument," Luk 22:31; Rom 5:3) is to sever the moral chaff from the wheat, not to crush utterly; "His judgments are usually in the line of our offenses; by the nature of the judgments we may usually ascertain the nature of the sin" [BARNES].
This chapter opens the series of prophecies as to the invasion of Judea under Sennacherib, and its deliverance.
Clarke: Isa 28:21 - -- As in Mount Perazim - כהר kehar ; but בהר bahar , In the mount, is the reading of two of Kennicott’ s, one of De Rossi’ s, and on...
As in Mount Perazim -
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Clarke: Isa 28:22 - -- The Lord God - אדני יהוה Adonai Jehovah . Adonai is omitted by four of Kennicott’ s MSS., and in the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic.
The Lord God -
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Clarke: Isa 28:23 - -- Give ye ear, and hear my voice "Listen ye, and hear my voice"- The foregoing discourse, consisting of severe reproofs, and threatenings of dreadful ...
Give ye ear, and hear my voice "Listen ye, and hear my voice"- The foregoing discourse, consisting of severe reproofs, and threatenings of dreadful judgments impending on the Jews for their vices, and their profane contempt of God’ s warnings by his messengers, the prophet concludes with an explanation and defense of God’ s method of dealing with his people in an elegant parable or allegory; in which he employs a variety of images, all taken from the science of agriculture. As the husbandman uses various methods in preparing his land, and adapting it to the several kinds of seeds to be sown, with a due observation of times and seasons; and when he hath gathered in his harvest, employs methods as various in separating the corn from the straw and the chaff by different instruments, according to the nature of the different sorts of grain; so God, with unerring wisdom, and with strict justice, instructs, admonishes, and corrects his people; chastises and punishes them in various ways, as the exigence of the case requires; now more moderately, now more severely; always tempering justice with mercy; in order to reclaim the wicked, to improve the good, and, finally, to separate the one from the other.
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Clarke: Isa 28:26 - -- For his God doth instruct him - All nations have agreed in attributing agriculture, the most useful and the most necessary of all sciences, to the i...
For his God doth instruct him - All nations have agreed in attributing agriculture, the most useful and the most necessary of all sciences, to the invention and to the suggestions of their deities. "The Most High hath ordained husbandry, "saith the son of Sirach, Ecclus. 7:15
Namque Ceres fertur fruges, Liberque liquori
Vitigeni laticem mortalibus instituisse
Lucretius, 5:14
"Ceres has taught mortals how to produce fruits; and Bacchus has taught them how to cultivate the vine.
Aratus, Phantom. v
"He, Jupiter, to the human rac
Indulgent, prompts to necessary toi
Man provident of life; with kindly sign
The seasons marks, when best to turn the gleb
With spade and plough, to nurse the tender plant
And cast o’ er fostering earth the seeds abroad."
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Clarke: Isa 28:27-28 - -- Four methods of threshing are here mentioned, by different instruments; the flail, the drag, the wain, and the treading of the cattle. The staff or fl...
Four methods of threshing are here mentioned, by different instruments; the flail, the drag, the wain, and the treading of the cattle. The staff or flail was used for the infirmiora semina , says Jerome, the grain that was too tender to be treated in the other methods. The drag consisted of a sort of strong planks, made rough at the bottom, with hard stones or iron; it was drawn by horses or oxen over the corn sheaves spread on the floor, the driver sitting upon it. Kempfer has given a print representing the manner of using this instrument, Amaen. Exot. p. 682, fig. 3. The wain was much like the former; but had wheels with iron teeth, or edges like a saw: Ferrata carpenta rotis per medium in serrarum modum se volventibus . Hieron. in loc. From this it would seem that the axle was armed with iron teeth or serrated wheels throughout. See a description and print of such a machine used at present in Egypt for the same purpose in Niebuhr’ s Voyage en Arabie, Tab. 17 p. 123; it moves upon three rollers armed with iron teeth or wheels to cut the straw. In Syria they make use of the drag, constructed in the very same manner as above described; Niebuhr, Description de l’ Arabie, p. 140. This not only forced out the grain, but cut the straw in pieces for fodder for the cattle; for in the eastern countries they have no hay. See Harmer’ s Observ. 1 p. 425. The last method is well known from the law of Moses, which "forbids the ox to be muzzled, when he treadeth out the corn;"Deu 25:4.
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Clarke: Isa 28:28 - -- The bread-corn - I read ולהם velahem , on the authority of the Vulgate and Symmachus; the former expresses the conjunction ו vau , omitted in...
The bread-corn - I read
Bruise it with his horsemen "Bruise it with the hoofs of his cattle"- For
Calvin: Isa 28:21 - -- 21.For as in Mount Perazim Since he speaks here of the reprobate, the Prophet holds out nothing but terrors and cruel punishment; for while the Lord ...
21.For as in Mount Perazim Since he speaks here of the reprobate, the Prophet holds out nothing but terrors and cruel punishment; for while the Lord deals kindly and gently with his children, he shews that he will be an object of terror to the reprobate. For this purpose he produces examples, in which the Lord displayed his arm in defense of his people, as when he routed the Philistines in the valley of Perazim, when David pursued them, (2Sa 5:20; 1Ch 14:11,) and at another time, when the Amorites and other enemies were slain by the Israelites in the valley of Gibeon, with Joshua as their leader, to whom the Lord granted that the “sun and moon should stand still,” that they might more easily pursue their enemies. (Jos 10:10.)
Shall Jehovah rise up By the word “rise up” he points out the power of God, because we think that he is lazy and indolent, when he does not punish the reprobate. It is therefore said that he “rises up” or stands erect, when he openly exhibits to us proofs of his power, and such as especially manifest the great care which he takes of his Church. Although the manner was different, (for in ancient times he “rose up” in defense of his chosen people against foreigners, but now he threatens war against the Jews,) yet Isaiah skillfully applies these examples; for by driving out internal enemies God will promote the advantage of his Church not less than if he directed his strength and arms against foreigners. He would thus reckon them in the number of enemies, though they falsely boasted that they were his people.
His strange work 239 Some think that this “work” is called “strange,” because nothing corresponds better to the nature of God than to be merciful and to pardon our sins; and that when he is angry, he acts against his will, and assumes a character that is foreign to him and that is contrary to his nature. By nature he is gentle, compassionate, patient, kind, slow to anger, as Scripture declares by many words and by a variety of expressions his infinite compassion. (Exo 34:6; Psa 103:8.) Others explain it to mean that the “work” is “strange,” because formerly he was wont to defend his people, and that it is monstrous that he now proceeds to attack and exterminate them, as if they were enemies.
For my own part, I consider “strange” to mean simply what is uncommon or wonderful; for this appellation is given to what is rare and unusual among men, and we know that they almost always view with astonishment whatever is new. It is as if he had said, “The Lord will punish you, and that not in a common or ordinary way, but in a way so amazing that at the sight or hearing of it, all shall be struck with horror.” It is certain that all the works of God are so many proofs of his power, so that they ought justly to excite our admiration; but because, through constant habit and looking at them, they are despised by us, we think that he does nothing unless he adopt some extraordinary methods. On this account Isaiah quotes ancient examples, in order that we may know that, though to men this vengeance be new and amazing, yet to God it is far from being new, since for a long period he has given proofs of his power and ability not less remarkable than these. Yet I willingly admit that the Prophet contrasts the wicked Israelites with the Philistines and Canaanites, as if he had said, “The Lord formerly performed miracles when he wished to save his people; he will now perform them in order to destroy that people; for since the Israelites have degenerated, they shall feel the hand of God for their destruction which their fathers felt for their salvation.”
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Calvin: Isa 28:22 - -- 22.Now therefore He again reminds those wicked men, whom he had formerly called “scorners,” (Isa 28:14,) that their cunning, and contempt, and je...
22.Now therefore He again reminds those wicked men, whom he had formerly called “scorners,” (Isa 28:14,) that their cunning, and contempt, and jeers, and mockery, will avail them nothing, because all their ingenuity will be thwarted; and he exhorts them to repentance, if there still be any of them that are capable of being cured. For this reason he repeats the same threatenings, in order to arouse them.
Lest your chains be more firmly fastened He says that all that they will gain by resistance will be to draw themselves more firmly into their nets. Instead of “chains,” there are some who render
Be ye not mockers This shews us how we ought to deal with wicked men, when we see that they are altogether destitute of the fear of God. All that remains for us to do is, to warn them that their jeers and scorn will be attended by no success in resisting the vengeance of God which hangs over them. We are also reminded that we ought not to sport with God, since we see, as in a mirror, what has been the end of those who despised the warnings and threatenings of the prophets since the beginning of the world.
For I have heard a consumption That his prediction may be firmly believed, he declares that he brings nothing forward which God did not reveal.
Upon the whole earth As if he had said, “The whole world abounds with shocking impiety, reprobate men have grown wanton in their wickedness, as if there would be no judgment of God; but throughout the whole world, or in every part of Judea, God will shew that he is judge and avenger, and not a corner of the earth will be exempted from troubles and calamities, because they have despised the word.” Now, although these things were revealed in the age of Isaiah, yet they belong not less to other times, in which God shews that he is always like himself, and is wont to execute his judgments by the same method and rule. 241
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Calvin: Isa 28:23 - -- 23.Give ear and hear my voice Isaiah makes use of a preface, as if he were about to speak of something important and very weighty; for we are not won...
23.Give ear and hear my voice Isaiah makes use of a preface, as if he were about to speak of something important and very weighty; for we are not wont to demand attention from our hearers, unless when we are about to say what is very important. And yet he seems here to speak of common and ordinary subjects, as for example, about agriculture, sowing, thrashing, and such like operations. But the Prophet intended to direct the minds of his hearers to higher matters; for when he discourses about the judgments of God, and shews with what wisdom God governs the world, though wicked men think that everything moves by chance and at random, he intended to lay down and explain a difficult subject, in a plain style, by metaphors drawn from objects which are well known and understood. We often complain that God winks too much at the crimes of wicked men, because he does not immediately punish them agreeably to our wish; but the Prophet shews that God appoints nothing but what is just and proper.
The design of this preface therefore is, that men may perceive their stupidity in carping at the judgments of God, and putting an unfavourable construction on them, while even in the ordinary course of nature they have a very bright mirror, in which they may see them plainly. There is an implied expostulation with men who shut their eyes amidst so clear light. He shews that they are dull and stupid in not understanding the works of God which are so manifest, and yet are so rash and daring that they presume to judge and censure what is hidden. In like manner Paul also, when speaking of the resurrection, pronounces that those who do not perceive the power of God in the seeds which are thrown into the earth are madmen.
“Thou fool, that which thou sowest does not grow or vegetate till it has rotted.”
(1Co 15:36.)
Thus Isaiah here declares that those who do not see the wisdom of God in things so obvious are stupid, and, in short, that men are blind and dull in beholding the works of God.
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Calvin: Isa 28:24 - -- 24.Doth the ploughman plough every day 242 to sow? This passage is commonly explained as if the Lord reproached his people for ingratitude, because...
24.Doth the ploughman plough every day 242 to sow? This passage is commonly explained as if the Lord reproached his people for ingratitude, because he had cultivated the field as a husbandman, and had spent on it all his care and industry, and yet did not reap such fruit as it ought to have yielded. Such is the interpretation given by the Jews, who have been followed also by the Greek and Latin commentators; but Isaiah’s meaning was quite different. He connects this doctrine with his former statement, that the destruction of Judea, or of the whole world, had been revealed to him; and therefore he adds, that still God does not always display his hand, or constantly punish the wickedness of men; for he often appears as if he did not see it, and delays the punishment of it for a time. The Lord’s forbearance and slowness to punish, which is thus manifested, is abused by wicked men for leading them to greater lengths in wickedness, as Solomon remarks that men are encouraged to commit wickedness by observing that
“all things happen alike to the good and to the bad,” (Ecc 8:14,)
that all the worst and basest men enjoy prosperity, while the godly are liable to distresses not less and even greater than those of other men. 243
In short, when the wicked perceive no difference in outward matters, they think either that there is no God, or that everything is governed by the blind violence of fortune. To such thoughts therefore Isaiah replies, “Do you not know that God has his seasons, and that he knows what he ought to do at the proper time?” If ploughmen do not “every day” cleave the earth or break the clods, this ought not to be attributed to their want of skill; for, on the contrary, their skill requires them to desist. 244 What would they gain by continually turning over the soil, but to weary themselves to no purpose, and prevent it from yielding any fruit? Thus God does not act with bustle or confusion, but knows the times and seasons for doing his work. 245
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Calvin: Isa 28:25 - -- 25.When he hath levelled its surface He now speaks about sowing. The sower will not put into the earth as much as he can, nor will he throw it in at ...
25.When he hath levelled its surface He now speaks about sowing. The sower will not put into the earth as much as he can, nor will he throw it in at random, but will measure the ground, and give to it as much as is necessary; for otherwise the superfluous mass would rot, and not a single grain would take root.
Wheat in measure, and barley measured 246 He will not mix various seeds, but will allot one part of the field for “wheat,” another for “vetches,” and another for “cummin.” He will do this in measure, for that I consider to be the proper interpretation of
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Calvin: Isa 28:26 - -- 26.His God instructeth and teacheth him what is right From whom did the husbandman learn these things but from God? If they are so well educated and ...
26.His God instructeth and teacheth him what is right From whom did the husbandman learn these things but from God? If they are so well educated and taught in the smallest matters, what ought we to think of so great a teacher and instructor? Does he not know how to apply a fixed measure and equity to his works? Does he not see the time for executing his judgment; when he ought to cut down the people, and, as we may say, to harrow 249 them; when he ought to thrash; what strokes, what kind of chastisements he ought to inflict; in short, what is most suitable to each time and to each person? Will not he who appointed the universal order of nature regulate these things also by a just proportion? Are men so headstrong that they will venture to remonstrate with him, or to impugn his wisdom? The general meaning is, that we ought not to judge rashly, if God does not immediately punish the wickedness of men.
This shews that we ought to restrain the presumption of men, who, even in the smallest matters, often fall into mistakes. If a person ignorant of agriculture should see a husbandman cutting fields with a plough, making furrows, breaking clods, driving oxen up and down and following their footsteps, he would perhaps laugh at it, imagining that it was childish sport; but that man would be justly blamed by the husbandman, and convicted of ignorance and rashness; for every person of great modesty will think that those things are not done idly or at random, though he does not know the reason. When the seed is committed to the ground, does it not appear to be lost? If ignorant men find fault with these things, as ignorance is often rash and presumptuous in judging, will not intelligent men justly blame and pronounce them to have been in the wrong? If this be the case, how shall the Lord deal with us, if we dare to find fault with his works which we do not understand?
Let us therefore learn from this how carefully we ought to avoid this rashness, and with what modesty we ought to restrain ourselves from such thoughts. If we ought to act modestly towards men, and not to condemn rashly what exceeds our understanding or capacity, we ought to exercise much greater modesty towards God. When we consider therefore the various calamities with which the Church is afflicted, let us not complain that loose reins are given to the wicked, 250 and that consequently she is abandoned to her fate, or that all is over with her; but let us believe firmly, that the Lord will apply remedies at the proper time, and let us embrace with our whole heart his righteous judgments.
If any person carefully examining those words shall infer from them that some are punished more speedily and others more slowly, and shall pronounce the meaning to be, that punishment is delayed, such a view is not merely probable, but is fully expressed by the Prophet. We draw from it a delightful consolation, that the Lord regulates his thrashing in such a manner that he does not crush or bruise his people. The wicked are indeed reduced by him to nothing and destroyed; but he chastises his own people, in order that, having been subdued and cleansed, they may be gathered into the barn.
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Calvin: Isa 28:29 - -- 29.This also hath proceeded from Jehovah of hosts This passage is explained by some, as if The Prophet had said that the science of agriculture proce...
29.This also hath proceeded from Jehovah of hosts This passage is explained by some, as if The Prophet had said that the science of agriculture proceeded from the Lord; but I consider it to be the application of what goes before. Having pointed out the wisdom of God, even in the smallest matters, he bids us, in like manner, raise our eyes to higher subjects, that we may learn to behold with greater reverence his wonderful and hidden judgments. A passing observation on the 26th verse may be made, and indeed ought to be made, that not only agriculture, but likewise all the arts which contribute to the advantage of mankind, are the gifts of God, and that all that belongs to skillful invention has been imparted by him to the minds of men. Men have no right to be proud on this account, or to arrogate to themselves the praise of invention, as we see that the ancients did, who, out of their ingratitude to God, ranked in the number of the gods those whom they considered to be the authors of any ingenious contrivance. Hence arose deification and that prodigious multitude of gods which the heathens framed in their own fancy. Hence arose the great Ceres, and Triptolemus, and Mercury, and innumerable others, celebrated by human tongues and by human writings. The Prophet shews that such arts ought to be ascribed to God, from whom they have been received, who alone is the inventor and teacher of them. If we ought to form such an opinion about agriculture and mechanical arts, what shall we think of the learned and exalted sciences, such as Medicine, Jurisprudence, Astronomy, Geometry, Logic, and such like? Shall we not much more consider them to have proceeded from God? Shall we not in them also behold and acknowledge his goodness, that his praise and glory may be celebrated both in the smallest and in the greatest affairs?
TSK: Isa 28:21 - -- in mount Perazim : 2Sa 5:20; 1Ch 14:11
the valley : Jos 10:10,Jos 10:12; 2Sa 5:25, Geba, 1Ch 14:16
his strange : Isa 28:19; Deu 29:21-24; Jer 30:14; L...
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TSK: Isa 28:22 - -- be ye : Isa 28:15; 2Ch 30:10, 2Ch 36:16; Jer 15:17, Jer 20:7; Mat 27:39, Mat 27:44; Act 13:40,Act 13:41; Act 17:32
lest : 2Ch 33:11; Psa 107:16; Jer 3...
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TSK: Isa 28:25 - -- in the principal : etc. or, the wheat in the principal place, and the barley in the appointed place. rye. or, spelt. Exo 9:31, Exo 9:32; Eze 4:9
pla...
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TSK: Isa 28:26 - -- For his God : etc. or, And he bindeth it in such sort as his God doth teach him, Exo 28:3, Exo 31:3-6, Exo 36:2; Job 35:11, Job 39:17; Psa 144:1; Dan ...
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TSK: Isa 28:27 - -- threshed : Isa 41:15; 2Ki 13:7; Amo 1:3
the fitches : Isa 27:7, Isa 27:8; Jer 10:24, Jer 46:28
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TSK: Isa 28:28 - -- Bread : Isa 21:10; Amo 9:9; Mat 3:12, Mat 13:37-43; Luk 22:31, Luk 22:32; Joh 12:24; 1Co 3:9; 1Co 9:9, 1Co 9:10
the wheel : Isa 28:27
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Isa 28:21 - -- For the Lord shall rise up - To rise up is indicative of going forth to judgment, as when one rises from his seat to accomplish anything. ...
For the Lord shall rise up - To rise up is indicative of going forth to judgment, as when one rises from his seat to accomplish anything.
As in mount Perazim - There is reference here, doubtless, to the event recorded in 2Sa 5:20-21, and 1Ch 14:11, where David is said to have defeated the Philistines at Baal-Perazim. This place was near to the valley of Rephaim 2Sa 5:19, and not far from Jerusalem. The word ‘ Perazim’ is from
As in the valley of Gibeon - In 1Ch 14:16, it is said that after the victory of Baal-Perazim, ‘ David smote the host of the Philistines from Gibeon even to Gaza.’ This victory is doubtless referred to here, and not the victory of Joshua over the Gibeonites Jos 10:10, as Vitringa and others suppose.
That he may do his work, his strange work - This is called his strange work because it would be inflicted on his people. He had destroyed their enemies often, but now he was about to engage in the unusual work of coming forth against his own people, and sweeping them away to a distant land. The work of judgment and punishment may be called the "strange"work of God always, inasmuch as it is not that in which he delights to engage, and is foreign to the benevolence of his heart. It is especially so when his own people are the objects of his displeasure, and when their sins are such as to demand that he should visit them with the tokens of his wrath.
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Barnes: Isa 28:22 - -- Now therefore - In view of the certain judgment which God will bring upon you. Be ye not mockers - This was the prevailing sin Isa 28:9-1...
Now therefore - In view of the certain judgment which God will bring upon you.
Be ye not mockers - This was the prevailing sin Isa 28:9-14, and on account of this sin in part the judgment of God was about to come upon the guilty nation.
Lest your bands be made strong - Lest your confinement should be more severe and protracted. God would punish them according to their sins, and if they now ceased to mock and deride him it would greatly mitigate the severity of their punishment (compare Isa 24:22).
For I have heard ... - I, the prophet, have heard Yahweh of hosts threaten a consumption.
A consumption ... - (see this phrase explained in the note at Isa 10:23)
Upon the whole earth - The whole land of Judea (see the note at Isa 24:1).
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Barnes: Isa 28:23 - -- Give ye ear - In this verse the prophet introduces an important and striking illustration drawn from the science of agriculture. It is connecte...
Give ye ear - In this verse the prophet introduces an important and striking illustration drawn from the science of agriculture. It is connected with the preceding part of the chapter, and is designed to show the propriety of what the prophet had said by an appeal to what they all observed in the cultivation of their lands. The previous discourse consists mainly of reproofs and of threatenings of punishment on God’ s people for their profane contempt of the messengers of God. He had threatened to destroy their nation, and so remove them for a time to a distant land. This the prophet had himself said Isa 28:21 was his ‘ strange work.’ To vindicate this and to show the propriety "of God’ s adopting every measure, and of not always pursuing the same course in regard to his people,"he draws an illustration from the farmer. He is not always doing the same thing. He adopts different methods to secure a harvest.
He adapts his plans to the soil and to the kind of grain; avails himself of the best methods of preparing the ground, sowing the seed, collecting the harvest, and of separating the grain from the chaff. He does not always plow; nor always sow; nor always thresh. He does not deal with all kinds of land and grain in the same way. Some land he plows in one mode, and some in another; and in like manner, some grain he threshes in one mode, and some in another - adapting his measures to the nature of the soil, and of the grain. Some grain he beats out with a flail; some he bruises; but yet he will be careful not to break the kernel, or destroy it in threshing it. However severe may appear to be his blows, yet his object is not to crush and destroy it Isa 28:28, but it is to remove it from the chaff, and to save it. In all this he acts the part of wisdom, for God has taught him what to do Isa 28:26, Isa 28:29. So, says the prophet, God will not deal with all of his people in the same manner, nor with them always in the same mode. He will vary his measures as a farmer does. When mild and gentle measures will do, he will adopt them. When severe measures are necessary, he will resort to them. His object is not to destroy his people, anymore than the object of the farmer in threshing is to destroy his grain. The general dedicate the propriety of God’ s engaging in what the prophet calls his ‘ strange act,’ and ‘ strange work,’ in punishing his people. The allegory is one of great beauty, and its pertinency and keeping are maintained throughout; and it furnishes a most important practical lesson in regard to the mode in which God deals with his people.
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Barnes: Isa 28:24 - -- Doth the plowman ... - The question here asked implies that he does "not"plow all the day. The interrogative form is often the most emphatic mo...
Doth the plowman ... - The question here asked implies that he does "not"plow all the day. The interrogative form is often the most emphatic mode of affirmation.
All day - The sense is, does he do nothing else but plow? Is this the only thing which is necessary to be done in order to obtain a harvest? The idea which the prophet intends to convey here is this. A farmer does not suppose that he can obtain a harvest by doing nothing else but plow. There is much else to be done. So it would be just as absurd to suppose that God would deal with his people always in the same manner, as it would be for the farmer to be engaged in nothing else but plowing.
Doth he open ... - That is, is he always engaged in opening, and breaking the clods of his field? There is much else to be done besides this. The word ‘ open’ here refers to the furrows that are made by the plow. The earth is laid open as it were to the sunbeams, and to the showers of rain, and to the reception of seed. The word rendered ‘ break’ (
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Barnes: Isa 28:25 - -- When he hath made plain ... - That is, when he has leveled, or made smooth the surface of the ground by harrowing, or rolling it. Doth he ...
When he hath made plain ... - That is, when he has leveled, or made smooth the surface of the ground by harrowing, or rolling it.
Doth he not scatter abroad - He does not sow one kind of grain merely, but different species according to the nature of the soil, or according to his wishes in regard to a crop.
The fitches - (
And scatter the cummin - (
And cast in the principal wheat - Margin, ‘ The wheat in the principal place.’ Vulgate, Per ordinem - ‘ In its proper order, place, proportion.’ So Lowth, ‘ In due measure.’ So Aben Ezra and Kimchi render it, ‘ By measure;’ and they suppose it means that if too much wheat be sown on the land, it will grow too thick, and that the spires will crowd and suffocate each other. Our translators have rendered the word
And the appointed barley - The barley is a well-known grain. The word rendered ‘ appointed’ (
And the rye - Margin, ‘ Spelt.’ The word usually denotes "spelt"- a kind of wheat now found in Flanders and Italy, called German wheat. It may, however, denote rye.
In their place - literally, ‘ In the border.’ Septuagint,
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Barnes: Isa 28:26 - -- For his God doth instruct him ... - Margin, ‘ He bindeth it in such sort as his God doth teach him.’ The more correct idea is convey...
For his God doth instruct him ... - Margin, ‘ He bindeth it in such sort as his God doth teach him.’ The more correct idea is conveyed in the text. The word
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Barnes: Isa 28:27 - -- For the fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument - The word used here ( חרוּץ chârûts ) denotes properly that which is...
For the fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument - The word used here (
This machine is not a stone cylinder; nor a plank with sharp stones, as in Syria; but a sort of sledge consisting of three rollers, fitted with irons, which turn upon axles. A farmer chooses out a level spot in his fields, and has his grain carried thither in sheaves, upon donkeys or dromedaries. Two oxen are then yoked in a sledge; a driver then gets upon it, and drives them backward and forward upon the sheaves; and fresh oxen succeed in the yoke from time to time. By this operation the chaff is very much cut down; it is then winnowed, and the grain thus separated.’ ‘ This machine,’ Niebuhr adds, ‘ is called Nauridj. It bas three rollers which turn on three axles; and each of them is furnished with some irons which are round and flat. Two oxen were made to draw over the grain again and again the sledge above mentioned, and this was done with the greatest convenience to the driver; for he was seated in a chair fixed on a sledge.’ See the illustration in the book to get an idea of this mode of threshing, and of the instruments that were employed.
Neither is a cart wheel - This instrument of threshing is described by Boehart (Hieraz. i. 2. 32. 311), as consisting of a cart or wagon fitted with wheels adapted to crush or thresh the grain. This, he says, was used by the Carthagenians who came from the vicinity of Canaan. It appears to have been made with serrated wheels, perhaps almost in the form of circular saws, by which the straw was cut fine at the same time that the grain was separated from the chaff.
But the fitches are beaten out with a staff - With a stick, or flail. That is, pulse in general, beans, pease, dill, cummin, etc., are easily beaten out with a stick or flail. This mode of threshing is common everywhere. It was also practiced, as with us, in regard to barley and other grain, where there was a small quantity, or where there was need of special haste (see Rth 2:17; Jdg 6:11).
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Barnes: Isa 28:28 - -- Bread corn - Hebrew, לחם lechem - ‘ Bread.’ But the word evidently denotes the material from which bread is made. The word...
Bread corn - Hebrew,
Is bruised - That is, is more severely bruised than the dill and the cummin; it is pressed and crushed by passing over it the sledge, or the wain with serrated wheels. The word
Because he will not ever be threshing it - The word rendered ‘ because’ (
Nor bruise it with his horsemen - Lowth renders this, ‘ With the hoofs of his cattle;’ proposing to read
1. The sledge with rollers, on which were pieces of iron, or stone, and which was dragged over the grain.
2. The cart or wain, with serrated wheels, and which was also drawn over the grain.
3. The flail, or the stick.
4. The use of cattle and horses.
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Barnes: Isa 28:29 - -- This also cometh ... - That is, these various devices for threshing his grain comes from the Lord no less than the skill with which he tills hi...
This also cometh ... - That is, these various devices for threshing his grain comes from the Lord no less than the skill with which he tills his land. (see Isa 28:26).
And excellent in working - Or rather, who magnifies (
1. The reason of afflictions. It is for the same cause which induces the farmer to employ various methods on his farm.
2. We are not to expect the same unvarying course in God’ s dealings with us. It would be as unreasonable as to expect that the farmer would be always plowing, or always threshing.
3. We are not to expect always the same kind of afflictions. The farmer uses different machines and modes of threshing, and adapts them to the nature of the grain. So God uses different modes, and adapts them to the nature, character, and disposition of his people. One man requires one mode of discipline, and another another. At one time we need one mode of correction to call us from sin and temptation; at another another. We may lay it down as a general rule, that "the divine judgments are usually in the line of our offences;"and by the nature of the judgment we may usually ascertain the nature of the sin. If a man’ s besetting sin is "pride,"the judgment will usually be something that is suited to humble his pride; if it be covetousness, his property may be removed, or it may be made a curse; if it be undue attachment to children or friends, they may be removed.
4. God will not crush or destroy his people. The farmer does not crush or destroy his grain. In all the various methods which he uses, he takes care not to pursue it too far, and not to injure the grain. So with God’ s dealings with his people. His object is not to destroy them, but it is to separate the chaff from the wheat; and he will afflict them only so much as may be necessary to accomplish this. He will not be always bruising his people, but will in due time remit his strokes - just as the thresher does.
5. We should, therefore, bear afflictions and chastisements with patience. God deals with us in mercy - and the design of all his dispensations toward us in prosperity and adversity; in sickness and in health; in success and in disappointment, is to produce the richest and most abundant fruits of righteousness, and to prepare us to enter into his kingdom above.
Poole: Isa 28:21 - -- Shall rise up to act and fight against you; as he is said to sit still , when he doth forbear to act.
Mount Perazim where he fought against the Ph...
Shall rise up to act and fight against you; as he is said to sit still , when he doth forbear to act.
Mount Perazim where he fought against the Philistines, 2Sa 5:20 . The valley of Gibeon ; where he fought against the Canaanites, Jos 10:10 , &c, and afterwards against the Philistines, 1Ch 14:16 .
His strange work the execution of his judgment against Israel, which he calleth his strange work, to intimate either,
1. That God would punish them not with ordinary punishments, but in a most dreadful, and singular, and extraordinary manner; such a judgment being called
a marvellous work Isa 29:14 , although the Hebrew word there used be not the same with this, but of a much differing signification. Or rather,
2. That this work of bringing total and irrecoverable destruction upon Israel was contrary to the benignity of his own nature, and to the usual way of dealing with his people, whom he used and delighted to protect, and spare, and bless; and whom, even when he is angry with them, and punisheth them, he handleth more gently than he doth other persons, in judgment remembering mercy to them, as was noted, Isa 27:7,8 : see also Isa 26:11 .
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Poole: Isa 28:22 - -- Be ye not mockers for your own sakes do not make a mock of God’ s word and threatenings, as you use to do.
Lest your bands be made strong lest...
Be ye not mockers for your own sakes do not make a mock of God’ s word and threatenings, as you use to do.
Lest your bands be made strong lest thereby you make the judgments of God, which are oft compared to bands, as Psa 66:11 73:4 , and elsewhere, more sure and unavoidable, and more severe and terrible, as bands are when they are tied faster and more strongly upon a prisoner.
I have heard from the Lord God of hosts a consumption, even determined upon the whole earth God hath assured me that he will utterly root out and destroy the people of Israel; as indeed he did in Hezekiah’ s reign.
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Observe what I say, and do you judge if it be not reasonable.
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Poole: Isa 28:24 - -- Doth the ploughman plough all day to sow? the ploughman doth not spend all his time in ploughing the ground, in order to the sowing it, or, as it fol...
Doth the ploughman plough all day to sow? the ploughman doth not spend all his time in ploughing the ground, in order to the sowing it, or, as it follows, in opening it, and breaking its clods; but he hath several times for several works, a time for ploughing, and a time for sowing and harrowing, and a time for reaping, and a time for threshing, or beating, and bruising the corn for his own use; which wisdom God hath put into him. This is the sum of the similitude propounded here and in the following verses; the design and meaning whereof seems to be this, to teach them that God had his times and seasons for several works, and that the methods of his providence were various at several times, and towards several persons or people; and therefore that those scoffing Israelites were guilty of great folly, in flattering themselves, and despising God’ s threatenings, because of God’ s long patience towards them, and because of their present impunity and prosperity; for God would certainly and speedily take a time to thresh and break them with his judgments, as at present he ploughed and harrowed them, and so prepared them for it by his threatenings.
Doth he open understand, all day, or continually, out of the foregoing clause.
And break the clods of his ground which they used to do with a kind of harrow, or other proper instrument. See Jer 4:3 Hos 10:11,12
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Poole: Isa 28:25 - -- Made plain the face thereof by breaking the clods, which made it ragged and uneven.
The principal wheat either,
1. The wheat, which is the princip...
Made plain the face thereof by breaking the clods, which made it ragged and uneven.
The principal wheat either,
1. The wheat, which is the principal or chief of all these grains; or,
2. The best wheat, which he prudently chooseth for seed.
The appointed barley that proportion of barley which he appointed. Or, as others, the marked barley ; or, the choice barley , which they laid aside in a sack for seed; and therefore set aside with a peculiar mark upon it. In their place , Heb. in his border ; each seed in a several and proper place.
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Poole: Isa 28:26 - -- The sense of the words thus rendered is this, All this he performeth by that discretion which God hath put into him; and therefore be assured that G...
The sense of the words thus rendered is this, All this he performeth by that discretion which God hath put into him; and therefore be assured that God will order all his affairs with judgment, and will in due season execute the punishments which now he threatens, and will perfect his own works. But the words by some are rendered otherwise.
And he beateth it out (as this word may be rendered, 1Ki 12:11 Pro 19:18 29:17 ) in such sort as his God doth teach him ; in a discreet manner, which being generally mentioned here, is particularly described in the following verse.
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Poole: Isa 28:27 - -- A threshing instrument which then and there was made like a sled shod with iron, which was drawn by men or beasts over the sheafs of corn, to bruise ...
A threshing instrument which then and there was made like a sled shod with iron, which was drawn by men or beasts over the sheafs of corn, to bruise them, and beat the grain out of them.
A cart wheel a lesser and lower wheel than a cart wheel, but of the same form, upon which possibly the threshing instrument was drawn.
The fitches are beaten out with a staff, and the cummin with a rod as being unable to bear harder usage.
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Poole: Isa 28:28 - -- Bread corn is bruised with a threshing instrument, by comparing this with the foregoing verse and the following words.
Because or rather, but , or...
Bread corn is bruised with a threshing instrument, by comparing this with the foregoing verse and the following words.
Because or rather, but , or nevertheless , as the word is frequently used. The sense is, The husbandman doth indeed thresh the bread corn, but he doth it with moderation, and only for a time, not for ever.
Nor break it understand, for ever , out of the foregoing clause, as is usual in Scripture.
With his horsemen which governed the horse or horses that drew the threshing instrument. Or, with horses ; for it is evident, and hath been observed before, that this Hebrew word signifies horses as well as horsemen . And this was another way of threshing out the corn, by driving horses, or other cattle, over the sheaves to tread it out; of which see Deu 25:4 Mic 4:13 .
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Poole: Isa 28:29 - -- This also this part of the husbandman’ s discretion, expressed Isa 28:27,28 , as well as that expressed Isa 28:24,25 .
Which is wonderful in co...
This also this part of the husbandman’ s discretion, expressed Isa 28:27,28 , as well as that expressed Isa 28:24,25 .
Which is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in working: these words contain the application of the similitude. The husbandman manageth all his affairs with common discretion; but God governs the world and his church with wonderful wisdom; he is great and marvellous, both in the design or contrivance of things, and in the execution of them.
Haydock: Isa 28:21 - -- As in, &c. As the Lord fought against the Philistines in Baal Pharisim, (2 Kings v.) and against the Chanaanites, in the valley of Gabaon, Josue x. ...
As in, &c. As the Lord fought against the Philistines in Baal Pharisim, (2 Kings v.) and against the Chanaanites, in the valley of Gabaon, Josue x. (Challoner) ---
Strange. He punished unwillingly. (Calmet) ---
"It is not God's work to ruin what he has created." (St. Jerome) ---
He will punish in an extraordinary manner those scoffers, ver. 15., and Numbers xvi. 29. (Piscator)
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Haydock: Isa 28:22 - -- Earth. Nabuchodonosor will take a complete and speedy vengeance, chap. x. 22.
Earth. Nabuchodonosor will take a complete and speedy vengeance, chap. x. 22.
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Haydock: Isa 28:24 - -- Sow. The works of the husbandman vary, so will God's punishments be inflicted with measure, according to each one's deserts, ver. 27., and Wisdom vi...
Sow. The works of the husbandman vary, so will God's punishments be inflicted with measure, according to each one's deserts, ver. 27., and Wisdom vi. 7. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Isa 28:25 - -- Gith. Heberw ketsach. Septuagint, Greek: melanthion. (Haydock) (Pliny, [Natural History?] xx. 17.) (Menochius) ---
Septuagint have not expr...
Gith. Heberw ketsach. Septuagint, Greek: melanthion. (Haydock) (Pliny, [Natural History?] xx. 17.) (Menochius) ---
Septuagint have not expressed all the terms of the original, (Haydock) being perhaps ignorant of their meaning. (St. Jerome)
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Haydock: Isa 28:26 - -- God. From him proceeds every useful invention. The pagans attributed the discovery of corn, &c., to their idols.
God. From him proceeds every useful invention. The pagans attributed the discovery of corn, &c., to their idols.
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Saws, or heavy instruments. It would be thus crushed too much. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Isa 28:28 - -- But. Septuagint, "it shall be eaten with bread. For I will not be angry with you for ever, nor shall the sounds of my bitter wrath trample upon you...
But. Septuagint, "it shall be eaten with bread. For I will not be angry with you for ever, nor shall the sounds of my bitter wrath trample upon you." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Isa 28:29 - -- This also, &c. Such also is the proceeding of the Lord with his land, and the diverse seeds he sows therein. (Challoner)
This also, &c. Such also is the proceeding of the Lord with his land, and the diverse seeds he sows therein. (Challoner)
Gill: Isa 28:21 - -- For the Lord shall rise up as in Mount Perazim,.... Where the Lord broke forth on David's enemies the Philistines, as the breach of waters; see Isa 2...
For the Lord shall rise up as in Mount Perazim,.... Where the Lord broke forth on David's enemies the Philistines, as the breach of waters; see Isa 28:17 and destroyed them, from whence the place had the name of Baalperazim, 2Sa 5:20. The Targum is,
"for as the mountain which moved when the glory of the Lord was revealed in the days of Uzziah the king;''
referring to the earthquake in his time, Amo 1:1,
he shall be wroth as in the valley of Gibeon; Josephus Ben Gorion b makes mention of the valley of Gibeon, where a battle was fought between Cestius the Roman general and the Jews, in which the latter got the victory, and says it was about six miles from Jerusalem: here the Philistines were smitten, returning again after they had been vanquished before, 1Ch 14:16 though it is more generally thought that this refers to the discomfiture of the Canaanites in the times of Joshua, when also hailstones fell upon them, and destroyed many; see Isa 28:17 and when the sun and moon stood still till Israel were avenged on their enemies, and which showed the power and presence of God with them, Jos 10:10 and so the Targum, which adds,
"and in the miracles which he (the Lord) did for Joshua, in the valley of Gibeon;''
and these instances are mentioned as proofs of the divine power and vengeance, and to assure the Jews that the Lord would rise up in the same wrath and indignation against them, and consume them:
that he may do his work, his strange work, and bring to pass his act, his strange act; which may be called so, because in the above mentioned instances he fought for his people Israel, but in this he would fight against them; and because this was a work and act of strict justice and awful severity, and not so agreeable to him as acts of mercy, grace, and goodness, in which he delights; or rather, because it was an unusual one, marvellous and surprising, and would be so to the Jews themselves, and even to their enemies, and to all the world, as the destruction of Jerusalem was, especially as by the Romans; see Hab 1:5. Vitringa, besides this, adds the calling of the Gentiles, the seizing of the inheritance of the world, and the destruction of the kingdom of Satan in the Roman empire. The Targum interprets this in a very contrary sense, of such as do strange works, idolatry, for which they are consumed.
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Gill: Isa 28:22 - -- Now therefore be ye not mockers,.... At the words of the prophets, and the judgments denounced by them, which is very common, when they are deferred, ...
Now therefore be ye not mockers,.... At the words of the prophets, and the judgments denounced by them, which is very common, when they are deferred, and not immediately executed: this was the case before the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, and one cause of it, 2Ch 36:16 and also by the Romans; see Act 13:41,
lest your bands be made strong; punishment become heavier, and more grievous; and so the Syriac version renders it; as prisoners that attempt to make their escape have their bonds and fetters made faster, and so are put to more pain and distress; to which the allusion seems to be, signifying, that by scoffing and mocking at the word of God they would bring upon themselves greater and sorer punishments, Heb 10:29,
for I have heard from the Lord GOD of hosts; in a vision from him, by a spirit of prophecy, as a secret communicated by him; for whatever the Lord did he usually made it known to his prophets; and it might be depended upon what they said, as being what the Lord had declared in their hearing; see Amo 3:7,
a consumption, even determined upon the whole earth: or, "on the whole land", the land of Judea; for this destruction seems only to respect that; and is the same with "the consummation, and that determined", that should be "poured upon the desolate", Dan 9:27 which manifestly designs the destruction of the Jews by the Romans, which was an affair determined by the Lord, whose counsel shall stand, and therefore would surely come to pass.
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Gill: Isa 28:23 - -- Give ye ear, and hear my voice,.... So said the prophet, as the Targum introduces the words; and because what he was about to say was of importance, a...
Give ye ear, and hear my voice,.... So said the prophet, as the Targum introduces the words; and because what he was about to say was of importance, and delivered in a parabolical manner, and required attention, he makes use of a variety of words to the same purpose, to engage their attention:
hearken, and hear my speech; now about to be made; listen to it, and get the understanding of it.
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Gill: Isa 28:24 - -- Doth the ploughman plough all day to sow?.... Or, "every day"; he ploughs in order to sow; by ploughing he prepares the ground for sowing, that is his...
Doth the ploughman plough all day to sow?.... Or, "every day"; he ploughs in order to sow; by ploughing he prepares the ground for sowing, that is his end in ploughing; and he may plough a whole day together when he is at it, but he does not plough every day in the year; he has other work to do besides ploughing, as is later mentioned; such as breaking of clods, sowing seed, and threshing the grain after it is ripe, and reaped, and gathered. The prophet signifies that the Lord, like a ploughman, had different sorts of work; he was not always doing one and the same thing; and particularly, that he would not be always admonishing and threatening men, and making preparation for his judgments, but in a little time he would execute them, signified by after metaphors:
doth he open and break the clods of his ground? he does, with a mallet or iron bar, or with the harrow; whereby the ground is made even, and so more fit for sowing. The Targum interprets the whole in a mystical sense, of the instructions of the prophets, thus,
"at all times the prophets prophesy to teach, if perhaps the ears of sinners may be opened to receive instruction;''
and it may be applied to the work of the Spirit of God upon men's hearts, by the ministry of the word: the heart of man is like the "fallow ground", hard and obdurate, barren and unfruitful; the ministry of the word is the "plough", and ministers are the "ploughmen"; but it is the Spirit of God that makes their ministrations useful, for the conviction of the mind, the pricking of the heart, and breaking it in pieces; see Jer 4:3.
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Gill: Isa 28:25 - -- When he hath made plain the face thereof,.... By harrowing it, after it is ploughed:
doth he not cast abroad the fitches, and scatter the cummin; i...
When he hath made plain the face thereof,.... By harrowing it, after it is ploughed:
doth he not cast abroad the fitches, and scatter the cummin; in sowing them in the ground, prepared for them; the former of these does not seem to be the same we so call, but something else. The Septuagint version calls it the little "melanthion" c, the same with the "nigella" d of the Latins, and is sometimes called "gith" e, as in the Vulgate Latin version here. The Syriac and Arabic versions render it "anise", which is mentioned along with "cummin", as common with the Jews, and which, in Christ's time, were tithed, Mat 23:23 and both these in the text are by Kimchi said to be the food of man:
and cast in the principal wheat and the appointed barley and the rye in their place? each in their proper place, or in soil suitable for them; some land being more suitable for the one than for the other, which the husbandman understands: "wheat" is the choicest and most excellent grain, and therefore called "principal"; or else because it is "first" sown, or sown in the best and "principal" ground: "barley" is said to be "appointed", or to be sowed in a place appointed for it; or "marked" f, referring either to places marked in the field, where it should be sown; which sense the Targum and the Jewish commentators favour; or to sacks of it marked, in which the best seed for sowing was put: "and the rye in its border" g; appointed for that Jarchi thinks this refers to the different places of sowing; the wheat was sown in the middle of the field; barley round about the mark or sign for that purpose; and rye upon the borders. The Targum is,
"as wheat is sown in an uncultivated field, and barley by the signs, and rye by the borders;''
but the whole is intended to express the wisdom of the husbandman, in sowing different seeds, not in the same field, which was forbidden by the law, Lev 19:19 but in ground suitable to each of them; and in the mystical sense designs the execution of divine judgments on men, in proportion to their sins, after they have been admonished of them, and reproved for them; and may be applied also to the sowing of the seed of the word in the hearts of men, and illustrated by the parable of the sower in Mat 13:19.
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Gill: Isa 28:26 - -- For his God doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach him. God gives the husbandman instruction and discretion how to sow his seed, at what tim...
For his God doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach him. God gives the husbandman instruction and discretion how to sow his seed, at what time, and in a proper place; for this refers to what goes before; though some think a new act is here intended, namely, threshing or beating out of corn, rendering the words, "and he" (the husbandman) "beateth it out, according to the discretion", or "judgment, his God teaches him" h; which is expressed in general terms here, and is next particularly insisted on in the following verses Isa 28:27.
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Gill: Isa 28:27 - -- For the fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument,.... A wooden sledge, dray, or cart, drawn on wheels; the bottom of which was stuck with ...
For the fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument,.... A wooden sledge, dray, or cart, drawn on wheels; the bottom of which was stuck with iron teeth, and the top filled with stones, to press it down with the weight thereof, and was drawn by horses, or oxen, to and fro, over the sheaves of corn, laid in proper order, whereby the grain was separated from the husk: See Gill on 1Co 9:9 but fitches, the grain of them being more easily separated, such an instrument was not used in threshing them:
neither is a cart wheel turned about upon the cummin; the cart wheel of the above instrument was not turned upon the cummin, that being also more easily threshed, or beaten out, and therefore another method was used with these, as follows:
but the fitches are beaten out with a staff, and the cummin with a rod: in like manner as corn is with us threshed out with a flail; so the Lord proportions the chastisement, and corrections of his people to the grace and strength that he gives them; he afflicts them either more gently, or more severely, as they are able to bear it; with some he uses his staff and rod, and with others his threshing instrument and cart wheel; some being easier and others harder to be wrought upon by the afflictive dispensations of Providence; see 1Co 10:13 or this may point out the difference between the punishment of wicked men and the chastisement of the saints.
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Gill: Isa 28:28 - -- Bread corn is bruised,.... The corn which bread is made of is bruised and ground in a mill:
because he will not always be threshing it; for there ...
Bread corn is bruised,.... The corn which bread is made of is bruised and ground in a mill:
because he will not always be threshing it; for there is another way of bringing it to flour, that so it may be made bread, namely, by grinding it in a mill; and therefore the husbandman uses his discretion in threshing it; he will not thresh it too much, nor too long, no more than what is necessary to get out the grain, but will take care that he does not bruise and break it; as follows:
nor break it with the wheel of his cart, nor bruise it with his horsemen; though he makes use of the above threshing instrument, drawn upon wheels by horses, or oxen, for the threshing out of wheat, barley, or rye, corn of which bread is made; yet he takes care that it is not crushed and spoiled by the wheels of the cart, or the feet of the horses, or oxen, going too often over it; by all which may be signified the tender regard of God in afflicting his own people; he will not always be chiding, striving, and contending with them, or be always angry, and ever afflicting, and, when he does afflict, it is in a tender and careful manner, Psa 103:9.
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Gill: Isa 28:29 - -- This also cometh from the Lord of hosts,.... All this wisdom the husbandman has, in manuring his ground, in sowing it with proper seed, and in threshi...
This also cometh from the Lord of hosts,.... All this wisdom the husbandman has, in manuring his ground, in sowing it with proper seed, and in threshing it out in a manner suitable to it. Agriculture or husbandry, even among the Heathens, is always ascribed to God, as an invention of his, and it was the first work which God put man to, and instructed him in, Gen 3:23 and as this, so all other arts, and sciences, and manufactures, come from God, even all things in nature, providence, and grace, and the knowledge of them; wherefore he himself must be infinitely wise and knowing; see Psa 94:9 and be as he is next described:
which is wonderful in counsel: in giving counsel to man, both with respect to things temporal and spiritual; and whose counsel is always wise and good, and for the best; and, when taken, infallibly succeeds. See an instance of his wonderful counsel, Rev 3:18 and also he is "wonderful" in forming wise plans and schemes of operation; the wise plan of his works of creation and providence was formed in his vast and infinite mind from eternity; the wise scheme of our redemption and salvation by Christ was concerted by him, wherein he has abounded towards us in all wisdom and prudence; and the manner, means, time, and place, of his gathering and the effectual calling of his people, are all wisely fixed by him; and he does all things after "the counsel of his will", Eph 1:11 and therefore it follows:
and excellent in working; both as to the matter or things wrought by him, which are the most excellent things in nature, providence, and grace, wrought out either by the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit; and as to manner of working, all being done well and wisely; and likewise with respect to the end, his own glory, and the good of his people.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 28:21 God’s judgment of his own people is called “his peculiar work” and “his strange task,” because he must deal with them th...
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NET Notes: Isa 28:24 Heb “All the day does the plowman plow in order to plant?” The phrase “all the day” here has the sense of “continually, ...
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NET Notes: Isa 28:25 The Hebrew text reads literally, “place wheat [?], and barley [?], and grain in its territory.” The term שׂוֹ...
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NET Notes: Isa 28:29 Verses 23-29 emphasize that God possesses great wisdom and has established a natural order. Evidence of this can be seen in the way farmers utilize di...
Geneva Bible: Isa 28:21 For the LORD shall rise as [on] mount ( a ) Perazim, he shall be angry as [in] the valley ( b ) of Gibeon, that he may do his work, his strange work; ...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 28:25 When he hath made ( c ) even the face of it, doth he not cast abroad the black cummin, and scatter the cummin, and cast in the wheat in rows and the a...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 28:1-29
TSK Synopsis: Isa 28:1-29 - --1 The prophet threatens Ephraim for their pride and drunkenness.5 The residue shall be advanced in the kingdom of Christ.7 He rebukes their error;9 th...
Maclaren -> Isa 28:21; Isa 28:23-29
Maclaren: Isa 28:21 - --God's Strange Work
That He may do His work, His strange work; and bring to pass His act, His strange act.'--Isaiah 28:21.
How the great events of one...
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Maclaren: Isa 28:23-29 - --The Husbandman And His Operations
Give ye ear, and hear my voice; hearken, and hear my speech. 24. Doth the plowman plow all day to sow? doth he open...
MHCC -> Isa 28:16-22; Isa 28:23-29
MHCC: Isa 28:16-22 - --Here is a promise of Christ, as the only foundation of hope for escaping the wrath to come. This foundation was laid in Zion, in the eternal counsels ...
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MHCC: Isa 28:23-29 - --The husbandman applies to his calling with pains and prudence, in all the works of it according to their nature. Thus the Lord, who has given men this...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 28:14-22; Isa 28:23-29
Matthew Henry: Isa 28:14-22 - -- The prophet, having reproved those that made a jest of the word of God, here goes on to reprove those that made a jest of the judgments of God, and ...
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Matthew Henry: Isa 28:23-29 - -- This parable, which (like many of our Saviour's parables) is borrowed from the husbandman's calling, is ushered in with a solemn preface demanding a...
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 28:21 - --
It would be with them as it was with the Philistines when David turned their army into water at Baal-perazim (2Sa 5:20; 1Ch 14:11), or when on anoth...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 28:22 - --
But the possibility of repentance was still open to them, and at least a modification of what had been threatened was attainable. "And now drive ye...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 28:23-26 - --
The address of the prophet is here apparently closed. But an essential ingredient is still wanting to the second half, to make it correspond to the ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 28:27-29 - --
Again, the labour of the husbandman is just as manifold after the reaping has been done. "For the black poppy is not threshed with a threshing sled...
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...
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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 ...
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Constable: Isa 28:1--33:24 - --3. The folly of trusting the nations chs. 28-33
Chapters 28-35 are somewhat similar to chapters ...
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