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Text -- Isaiah 31:5 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Isa 31:5 - -- Which come from above, and so cannot be kept off; which fly swiftly, and engage resolutely, when their young ones are in danger.
Which come from above, and so cannot be kept off; which fly swiftly, and engage resolutely, when their young ones are in danger.
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The destroying angel shall pass over Jerusalem.
JFB: Isa 31:5 - -- As in the image of "the lion," the point of comparison is the fearless might of Jehovah; so in that of the birds, it is His solicitous affection (Deu ...
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JFB: Isa 31:5 - -- Rather, "which defend" their young with their wings; "to fly" is a secondary meaning of the Hebrew word [MAURER]. "Hovering over" to protect their you...
Rather, "which defend" their young with their wings; "to fly" is a secondary meaning of the Hebrew word [MAURER]. "Hovering over" to protect their young [G. V. SMITH].
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JFB: Isa 31:5 - -- As the destroying angel passing over, so as to spare the blood-marked houses of the Israelites on the first passover (Exo 12:13, Exo 12:23, Exo 12:27)...
Clarke -> Isa 31:5
Clarke: Isa 31:5 - -- Passing over "Leaping forward"- The generality of interpreters observe in this place an allusion to the deliverance which God vouchsafed to his peop...
Passing over "Leaping forward"- The generality of interpreters observe in this place an allusion to the deliverance which God vouchsafed to his people when he destroyed the first-born of the Egyptians, and exempted those of the Israelites sojourning among them by a peculiar interposition. The same word is made use of here which is used upon that occasion, and which gave the name to the feast which was instituted in commemoration of that deliverance,
"As the mother birds hovering over their young
So shall Jehovah God of hosts protect Jerusalem
Protecting and delivering, passing over, and rescuing her.
This difficulty is, I think, well solved by Vitringa, whose remark is the more worthy of observation, as it leads to the true meaning of an important word, which hitherto seems greatly to have been misunderstood, though Vitringa himself, as it appears to me, has not exactly enough defined the precise meaning of it. He says, "
"- But Ajax his broad shield displayed
And screened his brother with a mighty shade.
-
Il. 1:3
Which the scholiast explains by
Calvin -> Isa 31:5
Calvin: Isa 31:5 - -- 5.As birds that fly This is the second comparison, by which the Prophet shews how great care the Lord takes of us, and how earnestly he is bent on ma...
5.As birds that fly This is the second comparison, by which the Prophet shews how great care the Lord takes of us, and how earnestly he is bent on making us happy. It is taken from birds, which are prompted by astonishing eagerness to preserve their young; for they almost kill themselves with hunger, and shrink from no danger, that they may defend and preserve their young. Moses makes use of the same comparison when, reproaching the people for their ingratitude, he compares the Lord to an eagle
“laying her nest, spreading her wings, and fluttering over her young.” (Deu 32:11.)
Christ also remonstrates with Jerusalem,
“How often would I have gathered thy children together, as a hen gathereth her chickens, and ye would not!”
(Mat 23:37.)
The sum of this passage is, that the Lord will be sufficiently powerful to defend his people, for whom he has a special love and a peculiar care. What Moses relates that God did, Isaiah promises that he will always do; for he will never forsake those whom he has once received into his favor. Lest any one therefore should imagine that this statement related only to the men of a single age, he expressly declares that God will spread his wings to defend Jerusalem. Nor is it unnecessarily that he mentions not only Mount Zion but its hill; for on that “hill” was built the temple in which God desired that men should call upon him. Wherever therefore the worship of God is pure, let us know that salvation will be certain; for men cannot call upon him in vain.
“Let us be his people, and, on the other hand, he will be our God.” (Lev 26:12.)
Defender -> Isa 31:5
Defender: Isa 31:5 - -- One might interpret this in terms of the end-time invasion of Israel by the Beast, with the city being delivered by armies flying from heaven with the...
One might interpret this in terms of the end-time invasion of Israel by the Beast, with the city being delivered by armies flying from heaven with the returning Christ (Rev 19:14). The near fulfillment, however, would seem to be when the angel of the Lord destroyed the army of the Assyrians who were besieging Jerusalem (2Ki 19:35)."
TSK -> Isa 31:5
TSK: Isa 31:5 - -- birds : Isa 10:14; Exo 19:4; Deu 32:11; Psa 46:5, Psa 91:4
defending : Psa 37:40
passing : Or rather, as Bp. Lowth renders, ""leaping forward,""pasoac...
birds : Isa 10:14; Exo 19:4; Deu 32:11; Psa 46:5, Psa 91:4
defending : Psa 37:40
passing : Or rather, as Bp. Lowth renders, ""leaping forward,""
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 31:5
Barnes: Isa 31:5 - -- As birds flying - This is another comparison indicating substantially the same thing as the former, that Yahweh would protect Jerusalem. The id...
As birds flying - This is another comparison indicating substantially the same thing as the former, that Yahweh would protect Jerusalem. The idea here is, that He would do it in the same manner as birds defend their young by hovering over them, securing them under their wings, and leaping forward, if they are suddenly attacked, to defend them. Our Saviour has used a similar figure to indicate his readiness to have defended and saved the same city Mat 23:27, and it is possible that he may have had this passage in his eye. The phrase ‘ birds flying,’ may denote the "rapidity"with which birds fly to defend their young, and hence, the rapidity with which God would come to defend Jerusalem; or it may refer to the fact that birds, when their young are attacked, fly, or flutter around them to defend them; they will not leave them.
And passing over -
Poole -> Isa 31:5
Poole: Isa 31:5 - -- As birds flying which come from above, and so cannot be kept off; which fly swiftly, and engage themselves Valiantly and resolutely, when they percei...
As birds flying which come from above, and so cannot be kept off; which fly swiftly, and engage themselves Valiantly and resolutely, when they perceive that their young ones are in eminent danger. He seems to allude, and to oppose this, to those boasting expressions of the Assyrian, Isa 10:14 : compare Deu 32:11,12 Mt 23:37 .
Passing over the destroying angel shall pass over Jerusalem untouched, and shall fall upon the Assyrians. He seems to allude to the history of God’ s passing over and sparing the houses of the Israelites, when he slew the Egyptians, in which this word is constantly used, Exo 12:12,23,27 .
Haydock -> Isa 31:5
Haydock: Isa 31:5 - -- Over. He will protect Jerusalem, notwithstanding the menaces of Sennacherib, as he did his people from the destroying angel.
Over. He will protect Jerusalem, notwithstanding the menaces of Sennacherib, as he did his people from the destroying angel.
Gill -> Isa 31:5
Gill: Isa 31:5 - -- As birds flying, so will the Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem,.... As the preceding metaphor expresses the mighty power of God, this his tenderness and ...
As birds flying, so will the Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem,.... As the preceding metaphor expresses the mighty power of God, this his tenderness and affection, as well as his speed and swiftness in the deliverance of his people. As birds in the air, at a distance, especially the eagle, have their eye upon their nests, and their young ones in them, and when in danger fly to their assistance, and hover over them, and about them, to keep off those that would hurt them, or carry them away; so the Lord, on high, sees his people when in distress, and hastens to help them, and does surround, protect, and defend them: thus the Lord did, when Sennacherib with his army besieged Jerusalem; who boasted, with respect to other nations, that he had "found as a nest the riches of the people", and that "there was none that moved the wing against him", Isa 10:14 to which it is thought the allusion is here:
defending also he will deliver it; from present distress, the siege of the Assyrian army:
and passing over he will preserve it; passing over the city of Jerusalem to the army of the king of Assyria, that lay encamped against it; and smiting that by an angel with a sudden destruction, preserved the city from the ruin it was threatened with. The allusion is rightly thought to be to the Lord's passing over the houses of the Israelites, when he destroyed the firstborn in Egypt, Exo 12:23 where the same word is used as here, and nowhere else.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 31:1-9
TSK Synopsis: Isa 31:1-9 - --1 The prophet shews the folly and danger of trusting to Egypt, and forsaking God.6 He exhorts to conversion.8 He shews the fall of Assyria.
MHCC -> Isa 31:1-5
MHCC: Isa 31:1-5 - --God will oppose the help sought from workers of iniquity. Sinners may be convicted of folly by plain and self-evident truths, which they cannot deny, ...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 31:1-5
Matthew Henry: Isa 31:1-5 - -- This is the last of four chapters together that begin with woe; and they are all woes to the sinners that were found among the professing people of ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 31:5
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 31:5 - --
Jehovah suddenly arrests the work of punishment, and the love which the wrath enfolds within itself begins to appear. "Like fluttering birds, so wi...
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This long section of the book deals with Israel's major decision in Isa...
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