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Text -- Isaiah 34:4 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Isa 34:4
Wesley: Isa 34:4 - -- The sun, moon, and stars. So great shall be the confusion and consternation of mankind, as if all the frame of the creation were broken into pieces. I...
The sun, moon, and stars. So great shall be the confusion and consternation of mankind, as if all the frame of the creation were broken into pieces. It is usual for prophetic writers, both in the Old and New Testament, to represent great and general calamities, in such words and phrases, as properly agree to the day of judgment; as on the contrary, the glorious deliverances of God's people, in such expressions, as properly agree to the resurrection from the dead.
(Psa 102:26; Joe 2:31; Joe 3:15; Mat 24:29).

JFB: Isa 34:4 - -- (2Pe 3:10-12). Violent convulsions of nature are in Scripture made the images of great changes in the human world (Isa 24:19-21), and shall literally...
(2Pe 3:10-12). Violent convulsions of nature are in Scripture made the images of great changes in the human world (Isa 24:19-21), and shall literally accompany them at the winding up of the present dispensation.

The stars shall fall when the heavens in which they are fixed pass away.
Clarke -> Isa 34:4
Calvin -> Isa 34:4
Calvin: Isa 34:4 - -- 4.And all the armies of heaven shall fade away Isaiah employs an exaggerated style, as other prophets are accustomed to do, in order to represent viv...
4.And all the armies of heaven shall fade away Isaiah employs an exaggerated style, as other prophets are accustomed to do, in order to represent vividly the dreadful nature of the judgment of God, and to make an impression on men’s hearts that were dull and sluggish; for otherwise his discourse would have been deficient in energy, and would have had little influence on careless men. He therefore adds that “the stars” themselves, amidst such slaughter, shall gather blackness as if they were ready to faint, and he does so in order to show more fully that it will be a mournful calamity. In like manner, as in a dark and troubled sky, the clouds appear to be folded together, the sun and stars to grow pale and, as it were, to faint, and all those heavenly bodies to totter and give tokens of ruin; he declares that thus will it happen at that time, and that everything shall be full of the saddest lamentation.
These statements must be understood to relate to men’s apprehension, for heaven is not moved out of its place; but when the Lord gives manifestations of his anger, we are terrified as if the Lord folded up or threw down the heavens; not that anything of this kind takes place in heaven, but he speaks to careless men, who needed to be addressed in this manner, that they might not imagine the subject to be trivial or a fit subject of scorn. “You will be seized with such terror that you shall think that the sky is falling down on your heads.” It is the just punishment of indifference, that wicked men, who are not moved by any fear of God, dread their own shadow, and tremble “at the rustling of a falling leaf,” (Lev 26:36,) as much as if the sun were falling from heaven. Yet it also denotes a dreadful revolution of affairs, by which everything shall be subverted and disturbed.
Defender -> Isa 34:4
Defender: Isa 34:4 - -- This "fearful sight from heaven" (Luk 21:11) will be seen following the opening of the sixth seal on the great title deed scroll in heaven during the ...
This "fearful sight from heaven" (Luk 21:11) will be seen following the opening of the sixth seal on the great title deed scroll in heaven during the early years of the great tribulation period that will come on the earth in the last days (Rev 6:12-14). The falling stars suggest a great swarm of meteorites impacting the earth. Rolling up the heavenly scroll would indicate either a slipping of earth's crust or a great cosmic cloud moving around the earth to blot out the sky."
TSK -> Isa 34:4
TSK: Isa 34:4 - -- all the : Isa 13:10, Isa 14:12; Psa 102:25, Psa 102:26; Jer 4:23, Jer 4:24; Eze 32:7, Eze 32:8; Joe 2:30,Joe 2:31; Joe 3:15; Mat 24:29, Mat 24:35; Mar...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 34:4
Barnes: Isa 34:4 - -- And all the host of heaven - On the word ‘ host’ ( צבא tsâbâ' ), see the note at Isa 1:9. The heavenly bodies often repr...
And all the host of heaven - On the word ‘ host’ (
Shall be dissolved - (
And the heavens shall be rolled together as a scroll - The word ‘ scroll’ here (
And all their host shall fall down - That is, their stars; either by being as it were melted, or by the fact that the expanse in which they are apparently located would be rolled up and removed, and there being no fixtures for them they would fall. The same image occurs in Rev 6:13. One somewhat similar occurs in Virgil, Georg. i. 365ff.
As the leaf falleth off from the vine ... - That is, in a storm, or when violently shaken.
Poole -> Isa 34:4
Poole: Isa 34:4 - -- All the host of heaven the sun, and moon, and stars. which frequently come under this name in Scripture, as Deu 4:19 17:3 , and elsewhere.
Shall be ...
All the host of heaven the sun, and moon, and stars. which frequently come under this name in Scripture, as Deu 4:19 17:3 , and elsewhere.
Shall be dissolved shall seem to be dissolved. So great shall be the confusion and consternation of mankind, as if all the frame of the creation were broken into pieces. Some understand this of the general judgment; which some passages here following will not permit. But it is a very usual thing for prophetical writers, both in the Old and New Testament, to represent great and general calamities in such words and phrases as properly agree to the day of judgment; as, on the contrary, the glorious deliverances of God’ s people are set forth in such expressions as properly agree to the resurrection from the dead. See Eze 37:7 Joe 2:31 3:15 Rev 6:12,13 .
The heavens shall be rolled together as a scroll Heb. as a book ; for books were then written in scrolls, which they usually rolled up together; and when they were so, no man could read any word in it; and no more shall any man be able to see those goodly lights of heaven, for they shall all be obscured and confounded. This phrase is used also Isa 8:1 Rev 6:14 .
As the leaf that falleth off from the vine when it is withered.
As a falling fig which falleth, either through great maturity, or being thrust out by green figs coming forth, or by any other accident.
Haydock -> Isa 34:4
Haydock: Isa 34:4 - -- Away. These strong expressions denote great misery, chap. xiii., and Joel ii. 10., and Ezechiel xxxii. 27. (Calmet) ---
Book. Hebrew, "roll." (...
Away. These strong expressions denote great misery, chap. xiii., and Joel ii. 10., and Ezechiel xxxii. 27. (Calmet) ---
Book. Hebrew, "roll." (Haydock) ---
Some thence foolishly inferred that the destiny of every one might be read in the heavens. (Huet.; Eusebius, prזp. vi. 11.; Philoo. xxiii.; Pic. Astrol. viii. 5.) ---
The prophet only means that the heavens shall be devoid of beauty, (Calmet) and covered with darkness. (Haydock)
Gill -> Isa 34:4
Gill: Isa 34:4 - -- And all the hosts of heaven shall be dissolved,.... "Pine away" i, as with sickness, grow languid, become obscure, lose their light, and be turned int...
And all the hosts of heaven shall be dissolved,.... "Pine away" i, as with sickness, grow languid, become obscure, lose their light, and be turned into blood and darkness; this figure is used to express the horror of this calamity, as if the very heavens themselves, and the sun, and moon, and stars, were affected with it; see Isa 13:10.
and the heavens shall be rolled gether as a scroll; a book, or volume, which when rolled up, one letter of it could not be read; and it was the manner formerly of making and writing books in the form of a roll; hence the word volume; and here it signifies that there should be such a change in the heavens, as that not a star should be seen, much less the sun or moon; and may signify the utter removal and abolition of all dignities and offices, supreme and subordinate, civil and ecclesiastical, in the whole Roman jurisdiction; thus the destruction of Rome Pagan is described in Rev 6:14 as the destruction of Rome Papal is here; from whence the language seems to be borrowed:
and all their host shall fall down, as the leaf falleth off from the vine, and as a falling fig from the fig tree; that is, the stars should fall down: by whom may be meant persons in office, that made a considerable figure; who shall fall from their stations, in which they shone with much splendour and grandeur, as leaves fall from trees in autumn, particularly the vine; or as unripe and rotten figs fall from the fig tree when shaken by a violent wind; the same metaphor is used in Rev 6:13.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 34:4 Heb “like the withering of a leaf from a vine, and like the withering from a fig tree.”
Geneva Bible -> Isa 34:4
Geneva Bible: Isa 34:4 And all the host of heaven ( c ) shall be dissolved, and the heavens shall be rolled together as a scroll: and all their hosts shall fall down, as the...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 34:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Isa 34:1-17 - --1 The judgments wherewith God revenges his church.11 The desolation of her enemies.16 The certainty of the prophecy.
MHCC -> Isa 34:1-8
MHCC: Isa 34:1-8 - --Here is a prophecy of the wars of the Lord, all which are both righteous and successful. All nations are concerned. And as they have all had the benef...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 34:1-8
Matthew Henry: Isa 34:1-8 - -- Here we have a prophecy, as elsewhere we have a history, of the wars of the Lord, which we are sure are all both righteous and successful. This worl...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 34:4
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 34:4 - --
The judgment foretold by Isaiah also belongs to the last things; for it takes place in connection with the simultaneous destruction of the present h...
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 34:1--35:10 - --4. The consequences of Israel's trust chs. 34-35
This section concludes the major section of Isa...




