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Text -- Isaiah 34:5-17 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
In the blood of these people.
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Wesley: Isa 34:5 - -- Where God dwells; in which this is said to be done, because it was there decreed and appointed.
Where God dwells; in which this is said to be done, because it was there decreed and appointed.
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Wesley: Isa 34:5 - -- Upon the Edomites, who, tho' they were nearly related to the Israelites, yet were their implacable enemies. But these are named for all the enemies of...
Upon the Edomites, who, tho' they were nearly related to the Israelites, yet were their implacable enemies. But these are named for all the enemies of God's church, of whom they were an eminent type.
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Wesley: Isa 34:5 - -- Whom I have cursed, and devoted to utter destruction, as the word properly signifies.
Whom I have cursed, and devoted to utter destruction, as the word properly signifies.
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The metaphor is taken from a great glutton, who is almost insatiable.
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Wesley: Isa 34:6 - -- By lambs, and goats, and rams, he means people of all ranks and conditions, high and low, rich and poor.
By lambs, and goats, and rams, he means people of all ranks and conditions, high and low, rich and poor.
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Wesley: Isa 34:6 - -- A chief city of Edom, and a type of those cities which should be most opposite to God's people.
A chief city of Edom, and a type of those cities which should be most opposite to God's people.
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Wesley: Isa 34:7 - -- It is confessed, this was a beast of great strength and fierceness; and it is used in this place to signify their princes and potentates, who shall be...
It is confessed, this was a beast of great strength and fierceness; and it is used in this place to signify their princes and potentates, who shall be humbled and cast down.
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With the fat of the slain sacrifices, mingled with it.
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Wesley: Isa 34:8 - -- This is the time which God hath fixed, to avenge the cause of his persecuted people.
This is the time which God hath fixed, to avenge the cause of his persecuted people.
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Idumea shall be dealt with, as Sodom and Gomorrah were.
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It shall remain as a spectacle of God's vengeance to all succeeding ages.
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Wesley: Isa 34:11 - -- It shall be entirely possessed by those creatures which delight in deserts and waste places.
It shall be entirely possessed by those creatures which delight in deserts and waste places.
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Wesley: Isa 34:11 - -- He shall use the line, or the stone or plummet joined to it, not to build them, but to mark them out to destruction, as workmen commonly use them to m...
He shall use the line, or the stone or plummet joined to it, not to build them, but to mark them out to destruction, as workmen commonly use them to mark what they are to pull down.
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They shall not find any willing to undertake the government.
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Shall have no courage or strength left in them.
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Wesley: Isa 34:16 - -- When this judgment is executed, if you pursue this prophecy, you will find, that all things exactly come to pass, as I have told you.
When this judgment is executed, if you pursue this prophecy, you will find, that all things exactly come to pass, as I have told you.
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Wesley: Isa 34:16 - -- My spirit, (such sudden changes of persons being frequent here) hath brought all these creatures together, as he formerly brought the creatures to Ada...
My spirit, (such sudden changes of persons being frequent here) hath brought all these creatures together, as he formerly brought the creatures to Adam, and to Noah, by an instinct which he put into them.
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Wesley: Isa 34:17 - -- He hath divided the land to them, as it were by lot and line, as Canaan was divided among the Israelites.
He hath divided the land to them, as it were by lot and line, as Canaan was divided among the Israelites.
JFB -> Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:8; Isa 34:9; Isa 34:10; Isa 34:10; Isa 34:10; Isa 34:10; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:12; Isa 34:13; Isa 34:13; Isa 34:14; Isa 34:14; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:17
JFB: Isa 34:5 - -- (Jer 46:10). Or else, knife for sacrifice for God does not here appear as a warrior with His sword, but as one about to sacrifice victims doomed to s...
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JFB: Isa 34:5 - -- Rather "intoxicated," namely, with anger (so Deu 32:42). "In heaven" implies the place where God's purpose of wrath is formed in antithesis to its "co...
Rather "intoxicated," namely, with anger (so Deu 32:42). "In heaven" implies the place where God's purpose of wrath is formed in antithesis to its "coming down" in the next clause.
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JFB: Isa 34:5 - -- Originally extending from the Dead Sea to the Red Sea; afterwards they obtained possession of the country east of Moab, of which Bozrah was capital. P...
Originally extending from the Dead Sea to the Red Sea; afterwards they obtained possession of the country east of Moab, of which Bozrah was capital. Petra or Selah, called Joktheel (2Ki 14:7), was capital of South Edom (see on Isa 16:1). David subjugated Edom (2Sa 8:13-14). Under Jehoram they regained independence (2Ch 21:8). Under Amaziah they were again subdued, and Selah taken (2Ki 14:7). When Judah was captive in Babylon, Edom, in every way, insulted over her fallen mistress, killed many of those Jews whom the Chaldeans had left, and hence was held guilty of fratricide by God (Esau, their ancestor, having been brother to Jacob): this was the cause of the denunciations of the prophets against Edom Isa 63:1, &c.; Jer 49:7; Eze 25:12-14; Eze 35:3-15; Joe 3:19; Amo 1:11-12; Oba 1:8, Oba 1:10, Oba 1:12-18; Mal 1:3-4). Nebuchadnezzar humbled Idumea accordingly (Jer 25:15-21).
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Glutted. The image of a sacrifice is continued.
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JFB: Isa 34:6 - -- Sacrificial animals: the Idumeans, of all classes, doomed to slaughter, are meant (Zep 1:7).
Sacrificial animals: the Idumeans, of all classes, doomed to slaughter, are meant (Zep 1:7).
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JFB: Isa 34:6 - -- Called Bostra by the Romans, &c., assigned in Jer 48:24 to Moab, so that it seems to have been at one time in the dominion of Edom, and at another in ...
Called Bostra by the Romans, &c., assigned in Jer 48:24 to Moab, so that it seems to have been at one time in the dominion of Edom, and at another in that of Moab (Isa 63:1; Jer 49:13, Jer 49:20, Jer 49:22); it was strictly not in Edom, but the capital of Auranitis (the Houran). Edom seems to have extended its dominion so as to include it (compare Lam 4:21).
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JFB: Isa 34:7 - -- Hebrew, reem: conveying the idea of loftiness, power, and pre-eminence (see on Job 39:9), in the Bible. At one time the image in the term answers to a...
Hebrew, reem: conveying the idea of loftiness, power, and pre-eminence (see on Job 39:9), in the Bible. At one time the image in the term answers to a reality in nature; at another it symbolizes an abstraction. The rhinoceros was the original type. The Arab rim is two-horned: it was the oryx (the leucoryx, antelope, bold and pugnacious); but when accident or artifice deprived it of one horn, the notion of the unicorn arose. Here is meant the portion of the Edomites which was strong and warlike.
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The young and old Edomites: all classes.
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JFB: Isa 34:8 - -- That is, the year when God will retaliate on those who have contended with Zion. Her controversy is His. Edom had thought to extend its borders by lay...
That is, the year when God will retaliate on those who have contended with Zion. Her controversy is His. Edom had thought to extend its borders by laying hold of its neighbor's lands and has instigated Babylon to cruelty towards fallen Judah (Psa 137:7; Eze 36:5); therefore Edom shall suffer the same herself (Lam 4:21-22). The final winding up of the controversy between God and all enemies of Him and His people is also foreshadowed (Isa 61:2; Isa 63:4; Isa 66:14-16; Mal 4:1, Mal 4:3; 2Th 1:7-9; Rev 11:18; Rev 18:20; Rev 19:2).
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JFB: Isa 34:9 - -- Images from the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 19:24-28; so Deu 29:23; Jer 49:17-18).
Images from the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 19:24-28; so Deu 29:23; Jer 49:17-18).
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JFB: Isa 34:10 - -- Edom's original offense was: they would not let Israel pass through their land in peace to Canaan: God recompenses them in kind, no traveller shall pa...
Edom's original offense was: they would not let Israel pass through their land in peace to Canaan: God recompenses them in kind, no traveller shall pass through Edom. VOLNEY, the infidel, was forced to confirm the truth of this prophecy: "From the reports of the Arabs, southeast of the Dead Sea, within three days' journey are upwards of thirty ruined towns, absolutely deserted."
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JFB: Isa 34:11 - -- The Hebrew is rendered, in Psa 102:6, "pelican," which is a seafowl, and cannot be meant here: some waterfowl (katta, according to BURCKHARDT) that te...
The Hebrew is rendered, in Psa 102:6, "pelican," which is a seafowl, and cannot be meant here: some waterfowl (katta, according to BURCKHARDT) that tenants desert places is intended.
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JFB: Isa 34:11 - -- From its being enumerated among water birds in Lev 11:17; Deu 14:16. MAURER thinks rather the heron or crane is meant; from a Hebrew root, "to blow," ...
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JFB: Isa 34:11 - -- Metaphor from an architect with line and plummet-stone (see on Isa 18:2; Isa 28:17); God will render to it the exact measure of justice without mercy ...
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Desolation. Edom is now a waste of "stones."
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JFB: Isa 34:12 - -- Rather, "As to her nobles, there shall be none there who shall declare a kingdom," that is, a king [MAURER]; or else, "There shall be no one there who...
Rather, "As to her nobles, there shall be none there who shall declare a kingdom," that is, a king [MAURER]; or else, "There shall be no one there whom they shall call to the kingdom" [ROSENMULLER] (Isa 3:6, &c.). Idumea was at first governed by dukes (Gen 36:15); out of them the king wan chosen when the constitution became a monarchy.
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JFB: Isa 34:14 - -- Rather, "the night specter"; in Jewish superstition a female, elegantly dressed, that carried off children by night. The text does not assert the exis...
Rather, "the night specter"; in Jewish superstition a female, elegantly dressed, that carried off children by night. The text does not assert the existence of such objects of superstition, but describes the place as one which superstition would people with such beings.
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Rather, "the arrow snake," so called from its darting on its prey [GESENIUS].
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JFB: Isa 34:16 - -- The volume in which the various prophecies and other parts of Scripture began henceforward to be collected together (Isa 30:8; Dan 9:2).
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JFB: Isa 34:16 - -- Image from pairing of animals mentioned, Isa 34:15 ("mate"); no prediction shall want a fulfilment as its companion. Or rather, "none of these wild an...
Image from pairing of animals mentioned, Isa 34:15 ("mate"); no prediction shall want a fulfilment as its companion. Or rather, "none of these wild animals (just spoken of) shall be wanting: none shall be without its mate" to pair and breed with, in desolate Idumea.
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Such changes of person are frequent in Hebrew poetry.
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JFB: Isa 34:17 - -- As conquerors apportion lands by lot, so Jehovah has appointed and marked out ("divided") Edom for the wild beasts (Num 26:55-56; Jos 18:4-6).
See on...
As conquerors apportion lands by lot, so Jehovah has appointed and marked out ("divided") Edom for the wild beasts (Num 26:55-56; Jos 18:4-6).
See on Isa 34:1, introduction there.
Clarke: Isa 34:5 - -- For my sword shall be bathed in heaven "For my sword is made bare in the heavens"- There seems to be some impropriety in this, according to the pres...
For my sword shall be bathed in heaven "For my sword is made bare in the heavens"- There seems to be some impropriety in this, according to the present reading: "My sword is made drunken, or is bathed in the heavens; "which forestalls, and expresses not in its proper place, what belongs to the next verse: for the sword of Jehovah was not to be bathed or glutted with blood in the heavens, but in Botsra and the land of Edom. In the heavens it was only prepared for slaughter. To remedy this, Archbishop Secker proposes to read, for
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Clarke: Isa 34:6 - -- The Lord hath a sacrifice "For Jehovah celebrateth a sacrifice"- Ezekiel, Eze 39:16, Eze 39:17, has manifestly imitated this place of Isaiah. He hat...
The Lord hath a sacrifice "For Jehovah celebrateth a sacrifice"- Ezekiel, Eze 39:16, Eze 39:17, has manifestly imitated this place of Isaiah. He hath set forth the great leaders and princes of the adverse powers under the same emblems of goats, bulls, rams, fatlings, etc., and has added to the boldness of the imagery, by introducing God as summoning all the fowls of the air, and all the beasts of the field, and bidding them to the feast which he has prepared for them by the slaughter of the enemies of his people: -
"And thou, son of man
Thus saith the Lord Jehovah
Say to the bird of every wing
And to every beast of the field
Assemble yourselves, and come
Gather together from every side
To the sacrifice which I make for you
A great slaughter on the mountains of Israel
And ye shall eat flesh and drink blood
The flesh of the mighty shall ye eat
And the blood of the lofty of the earth shall ye drink
Of rams, of lambs, and of goats
Of bullocks, all of them the fat ones of Bashan
And ye shall eat fat, till ye are cloyed
And drink blood, till ye are drunken
Of my slaughter, which I have slain for you.
The sublime author of the Rev 19:17, Rev 19:18, has taken this image from Ezekiel, rather than from Isaiah.
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Clarke: Isa 34:7 - -- The unicorns shall come down - ראמים reemim , translated wild goats by Bishop Lowth. The ראם reem Bochart thinks to be a species of wild...
The unicorns shall come down -
With blood "With their blood"-
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Clarke: Isa 34:8 - -- The year of recompenses for the controversy of Zion "The year of recompense to the defender of the cause of Zion"- As from דון dun , דין din...
The year of recompenses for the controversy of Zion "The year of recompense to the defender of the cause of Zion"- As from
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Clarke: Isa 34:11 - -- The cormorant - קאת kaath , the pelican, from the root קיא ki , to vomit, because it is said she swallows shell-fish, and when the heat of h...
The cormorant -
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The bittern -
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Clarke: Isa 34:11 - -- The owl - ינשוף yanshoph , the bittern, from נשף nashaph , to blow, because of the blowing noise it makes, almost like the lowing of an ox...
The owl -
The line of confusion, and the stones of emptiness "The plummet of emptiness over her scorched plains"- The word
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Clarke: Isa 34:13 - -- And thorns shall come up in her palaces - ועלו בארמנותיה vealu bearmenotheyha ; so read all the ancient versions
And thorns shall come up in her palaces -
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Clarke: Isa 34:13 - -- A court for owls - יענה yaanah , the ostrich, from ענה anah , to cry, because of the noise it makes. "They roar, "says Dr. Shaw, "sometimes...
A court for owls -
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The weld beasts of the desert -
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Wild beasts of the island -
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The satyr -
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Clarke: Isa 34:14 - -- The screech owl - לילית lilith , the night-bird, the night-raven, nyctycorax, from ליל layil , or לילה lailah , the night.
The screech owl -
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Clarke: Isa 34:15 - -- The great owl - קפוז kippoz , the ακοντιας, or darter, a serpent so called because of its suddenly leaping up or darting on its prey. ...
The great owl -
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Clarke: Isa 34:15 - -- The vultures - דיות daiyoth , the black vultures. My old MS. Bible renders these names curiously: And ageyn cumen schul devylis: the beste, par...
The vultures -
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Clarke: Isa 34:15 - -- Every one with her mate - A MS. adds אל el after אשה ishshah , which seems necessary to the construction; and so the Syriac and Vulgate. An...
Every one with her mate - A MS. adds
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Clarke: Isa 34:16 - -- My mouth "For the mouth of Jehovah"- For הוא hu , five MSS., (three ancient), read יהוה Jehovah , and another is so corrected; so likewise ...
My mouth "For the mouth of Jehovah"- For
Calvin: Isa 34:5 - -- 5.For my sword is made drunken in the heavens He says that the “sword” of the Lord is bloody, as extensive slaughter makes the “swords” wet w...
5.For my sword is made drunken in the heavens He says that the “sword” of the Lord is bloody, as extensive slaughter makes the “swords” wet with gore; and, in order to give greater weight to his style, he represents the Lord as speaking. But why does he say that it is in heaven? for God does not call men to heaven to inflict punishment on them, but executes his judgments openly in the world, and by the hand of men. 16 Here the Prophet looks at the secret decree of God, by which he appoints and determines everything before it is executed; and he does not mean the act itself, but extols the efficacy of the prediction, because the certainty of the effect is manifest from the unchangeable purpose of God; that unbelievers may know that the Lord in heaven takes account of the crimes of wicked men, although for a time they may pursue their career of iniquity without being punished, and that, although they enjoy profound peace, still the sword by which they shall be slain is even now bloody in the sight of God, when he determines to inflict punishment on them. In like manner Sodom (Gen 19:28) was already burning in the sight of God, while it freely indulged in wine and feasting, and in satisfying its lust; and the same thing must be said of other wicked men, who, while they are wallowing in pleasures, are held as appointed by God to be slain. We ought not, therefore, to fix our attention on the present state when we see wicked men enjoy prosperity and do everything according to their wish. Though no one annoys them, still they are not far from destruction when God is angry with them and is their enemy.
So it shall come down on Edom He expressly mentions the Edomites, who were hostile to the people of God, though related to them by blood, and distinguished by the same mark of religion; for they were, as we have formerly mentioned, 17 descended from Esau, (Gen 36:8,) and were the posterity of Abraham. At the present day, in like manner, we have no enemies more deadly than the Papists, who have publicly received the same baptism with ourselves, and even profess Christ, and yet cruelly persecute and would wish utterly to destroy us, because we condemn their superstitions and idolatry. Such were the Edomites, and therefore the Prophet has chiefly selected them out of the whole number of the enemies.
On the people of my curse By giving them this appellation he confirms the sentence which he had pronounced, for in vain would they endeavor to escape that destruction to which they were already destined and devoted. By this term he declares that they are already destroyed by a decree of heaven, as if they had been already separated and cut off from the number of living men. That it may not be thought that God has done it unjustly, he adds, to judgment; for there is nothing to which men are more prone than to accuse God of cruelty, and the greater part of men are unwilling to acknowledge that he is a righteous judge, especially when he chastises with severity. Isaiah, therefore, shews that it is a just judgment, for God does nothing through cruelty or through excessive severity.
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Calvin: Isa 34:6 - -- 6.The sword of Jehovah is filled with blood He follows out the same statement, but by a different description, which places the matter in a much stro...
6.The sword of Jehovah is filled with blood He follows out the same statement, but by a different description, which places the matter in a much stronger light, in order to shake off the drowsiness of wicked men, who are wont to laugh and scoff at all doctrine, as we have formerly remarked. It is therefore necessary that the judgments of God should be set forth as in a lively picture:, that it may not only make a deep impression on their dull minds, but may encourage believers by holy confidence, when they learn that the pride and rebellion of their enemies cannot at all hinder them from being dragged like cattle to the slaughter, whenever it shall be the will of God.
He compares it to sacrifices, for animals are slain in sacririce for the worship and honor of God, and in like manner the destruction of this people will also tend to the glory of God. And here he confirms what was formerly said about judgment, for when God executes his judgments, he shews forth his glow; so that the destruction of wicked men is justly compared to “sacrifices,” which belonged to his worship. “Sacrifices,” indeed, were undoubtedly not very pleasant and agreeable to behold, for the revolting act of taking away life, the reeking blood, and the stencil of the smoke, might have a repulsive effect; and yet in these things the honor of God shone brightly. Thus, also, this slaughter was hideous to behold, and little fitted to obtain regard; but believers, in order that they may hallow the name of God in this respect, are commanded to lift up their eyes to heaven; because, in executing such punishment, God erects altars to himself for slaying sacrifices. Because they unjustly oppressed the Church of God, and, forgetful of all humane feelings, treated the children of God with cruelty, Isaiah declares that in their blood is offered a sacrifice of sweet savor, and highly acceptable to God, because he executes his judgment.
With the blood of lambs and of goats Under this appellation he describes metaphorically the people that were to be slain, and, alluding to the various kinds of victims, includes not only all men of ordinary rank, but all the nobles, in order to intimate that the Lord will punish his enemies in such a manner that no man of any class whatever shall be exempted he mentions Bozrah, the chief city and metropolls, as it were, of the nation, where the greatest slaughter shall take place; and next, he adds, the country of Edom, through the whole of which this calamity shall take its course. 18
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Calvin: Isa 34:7 - -- 7.And the unicorns shall come down with them This verse is closely connected with the former, for he adds nothing new, but proceeds with the same fig...
7.And the unicorns shall come down with them This verse is closely connected with the former, for he adds nothing new, but proceeds with the same figure, amplifying what he had said about “rams” and “goats,” to which he adds not only bullocks but wild and savage beasts. It amounts to this, that the vengeance of heaven will be so unrelenting as to spare neither age nor rank, and to mark; for slaughter even cruel giants, notwithstanding their silly fierceness, just as if one were preparing a sacrifice which consisted indiscriminately of every kind of animals. It ought not to be thought strange that lambs are mingled with cruel beasts, for the term “lambs” is not employed in commendation of their mildness or harmlessness, but is applied comparatively to those who are feeble and who belong to the ordinary rank, which lays them under the necessity of having some appearance of modesty.
Although God may appear to be harsh in thus directing his hostility against all classes, yet, by the use of the word “sacrifice,” he claims for himself the praise of justice; and indeed no man, when he comes to the trial, will be found to be without blame, so that on good grounds all, without exception, are irrecoverably ruined. Such is the destruction which awaits all the reprobate, who of their own accord refuse to devote themselves to the service of God; irreligious hands shall offer them in sacrifice. 19
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Calvin: Isa 34:8 - -- 8.For it is the day of vengeance of Jehovah This verse must be viewed as closely connected with the preceding verses, for it points out the object wh...
8.For it is the day of vengeance of Jehovah This verse must be viewed as closely connected with the preceding verses, for it points out the object which the Lord has in view in punishing the Edomites with such severity; and that object is, that he wishes to avenge his people and defend their cause. If, therefore, he had not also assigned this reason, the former statements might have appeared to be obscure or inappropriate; for it would, have been an uncertain kind of knowledge if we did not consider that God, in punishing wicked men, testifies his unceasing affection and care to preserve his own people.
What was formerly said about the Edomites must undoubtedly be extended to the enemies of the Church, for all of them were included by the Prophet under a particular class; and, therefore, in adversity our hearts ought to be supported by this consolation:, that the attacks which we now suffer shall come into judgment before God, who justly claims for himself this office. The Prophet does not only mean that it is in his power to punish wicked men whenever he thinks proper, but, that he reigns in heaven, in order to punish every kind of injustice at the proper time.
But we must attend to the words day and year, by which he reminds us that God does not sleep in heaven, though for a little time he does not come forth, but delays his vengeance till a fit season, that believers may in the meantime “possess their souls in patience,” (Luk 21:19,) and may leave him to govern according to his inscrutable wisdom.
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Calvin: Isa 34:9 - -- 9.And its streams shall be turned into pitch What the Prophet now adds contains nothing new, but describes more fully this desolation. We have former...
9.And its streams shall be turned into pitch What the Prophet now adds contains nothing new, but describes more fully this desolation. We have formerly explained the reason wily the prophets employ these lively pictures in representing the judgments of God. It is for the purpose of leading men to view them as actually present, and of compelling them to acknowledge those things which their eyes and minds do not discern, or which, as soon as they are beheld and known, are immediately forgotten. But it ought also to be observed that the Prophets spoke of things which were dark and secret, and which were generally thought to be incredible; for many persons imagined that the Prophets uttered them at random. It was, therefore, necessary to add many confirmations, such as those which he employs in this and in other passages; and thus he denotes a horrible change, which shall destroy the whole face of Judea.
Moreover, he alludes to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, (Gen 19:24,) as the prophets very frequently do. In that destruction, as Jude informs us, we have a perpetual representation of the wrath of God against the reprobate, (Jud 1:7;) and it is not without good reason that the prophets call it to our remembrance, that all may learn to dread the judgments of God. To the same purpose is what he adds, —
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Calvin: Isa 34:10 - -- 10.By night and by day it shall not be quenched The Prophet’s language is undoubtedly hyperbolical; but the Lord is compelled to act towards us in ...
10.By night and by day it shall not be quenched The Prophet’s language is undoubtedly hyperbolical; but the Lord is compelled to act towards us in this manner, for otherwise plain words would produce no impression on us. When he declares that the wrath of God against the Edomites will resemble a fire that burns continually, he cuts off from them all hope of pardon, because, having never ceased to provoke God, they find that he is implacable; and Malachi also pronounces this expression of reprobation, that the curse of God will for ever rest on that nation. (Mal 1:4.) The contrast must be supplied, because some mitigation is always held out to the people of God for their comfort. But this does not need a lengthened interpretation. It is enough that we understand the meaning and design of the Prophet.
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Calvin: Isa 34:11 - -- 11.Therefore the pelican and the owl shall possess it As to these animals there are various opinions, and Hebrew commentators are not agreed about th...
11.Therefore the pelican and the owl shall possess it As to these animals there are various opinions, and Hebrew commentators are not agreed about them; but the design of the Prophet is evident, which is, to describe a desert place and an extensive wilderness. He undoubtedly mentions dreadful beasts and hideous monsters, which do not dwell with men, and are not generally known by them, in order to shew more fully how shocking will be this desolation. The former clause therefore is plain enough, but the latter is attended by some difficulty.
He shall stretch over it the cord of emptiness Some view the phrase “an empty cord” as bearing an opposite sense, and apply it to the Jews; but I take a more simple view, and think that, like all the preceding statements, it must relate to the Edomites. Anti to make it more clear that this is Isaiah’s natural meaning, we read the same word in the Prophet Malachi, who lived a long time afterwards. That passage may be regarded as an approbation of this prophecy.
“If Edom shall say, We have been diminished, we shall therefore return and rebuild the desolate places; thus saith the Lord of Hosts, They shall indeed build, but I shall pull down, and they shall call them the borders of wickedness, and the people against whom the Lord is angry for ever. And your eyes shall see, and ye shall say, Let the Lord be magnified on the borders of Israel.” —
(Mal 1:4.)
What Isaiah had foretold more obscurely, Malachi explains with greater clearness. The latter declares that “the Edomires shall build in vain,” and the former that “they shall stretch an empty cord.” As if he had said, “In vain shall the masterbuilders bestow their exertions on rebuilding the cities;” for builders make use of cords and plummets in all their measurements. He therefore shews that the efforts of those who shall intend to restore the land of Edom will be fruitless; for his meaning is, that they shall be destroyed in such a manner that they cannot at all recover from that destruction, though God usually alleviates other calamities by some consolation.
And hence we ought to draw a very profitable doctrine, that when cities are in some measure restored after having been thrown down, this arises from the distinguished kindness of God; for the efforts of builders or workmen will be unavailing, if he do not put his hand both to laying the foundation and to carrying forward the work. Fruitless and unprofitable also will their work be, if he do not conduct it to the conclusion, and afterwards take it under his guardianship. In vain shall men bestow great expense, and make every possible exertion, if he do not watch over and bless the work. It is only by the blessing of God, therefore, that we obtain any success; and hence also it is said that “his hands have built Jerusalem.” (Psa 147:2; Isa 14:32.) What Isaiah threatens in this passage against the Edomites, the Holy Spirit elsewhere declares as to the house of Ahab, meaning that it shall be razed to the very foundation. (2Kg 21:13.)
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Calvin: Isa 34:12 - -- 12.They shall call her nobles without a kingdom This passage has received various interpretations, which I do not quote, because it would be tedious ...
12.They shall call her nobles without a kingdom This passage has received various interpretations, which I do not quote, because it would be tedious to refute them. One of the most probable is, “They shall call his nobles to reign, but in vain.” As if he had said, “In their wretched condition none will be found willing to rule over them, and to undertake the charge of the commonwealth.” A statement of the same kind is found elsewhere, and we have formerly (Isa 3:6) seen one that is almost alike; but the words do not correspond. When the Prophet speaks thus, “They shall call her nobles, and they shall not be there,” he employs, I doubt not, witty raillery to censure the pride of that nation which had been cherished by longcontinued peace and abundance. When the Edomites, therefore, out of their mountains breathed lofty pride, the Prophet declares that they shall be disgracefully cast down, so that they shall have no nobility and no government; just as, when a kingdom has been overturned, government is taken away, so that the general mass of the people resembles a maimed or disfigured body, and there is no distinction of ranks. To those stately nobles who vaunted themselves so much, he says in mockery, that they shall be princes without subjects.
And all her princes shall be nothing The meaning of the former clause is still more evident from this second clause, in which he adds for the sake of explanation, that her princes “shall be reduced to nothing.’ It amounts to this, that the land of Edom shall resemble a mutilated body, so that nothing shall be seen in it but shocking confusion. This is the utmost curse of God; because, if men have no political government, they will hardly differ at all from beasts. Indeed, their condition will be far worse, for beasts can dispense with a governor, because they do not make war against their own kind; but nothing call be more cruel than man, if he be not held by some restraint, for every one will be driven by the furious eagerness of his own passions to every kind of vicious indulgence.
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Calvin: Isa 34:13 - -- 13.In her palaces she shall bring forth thorns He pursues the same subject; for he describes a frightful desolation, by which splendid houses and pal...
13.In her palaces she shall bring forth thorns He pursues the same subject; for he describes a frightful desolation, by which splendid houses and palaces are levelled to the ground, or reduced to a state so wild that they are of no use to men, but produce only briers, thorns, and nettles; which is more disgraceful than if they had been turned into fields and meadows. In this manner does the Lord punish the insolence of those who built lofty and magnificent houses and costly palaces, that the remembrance of them might be handed down to the latest posterity. Having banished men, he turns those dwellings into nests of birds and dens of wild beasts, that, instead of being, as they expected, the trophies of their name and renown, they may stand as monuments of foolish ambition. Thus the place of men is nearly supplied by beasts, which represent the dispositions of those who reared those goodly edifices. This overthrow of order is likewise a sad token of the wrath of God, when the earth, which was created for the use of man, beholds its natural lords banished, and is compelled to admit other inhabitants; for then, undoubtedly, it is cleansed from the defilements with which it was polluted.
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Calvin: Isa 34:14 - -- 14.And the wild beasts shall meet with the satyrs 20 These animals are thought by some commentators to mean fauns, by others screechowls or goblins, ...
14.And the wild beasts shall meet with the satyrs 20 These animals are thought by some commentators to mean fauns, by others screechowls or goblins, and by others satyrs; and it is not fully agreed what is the exact meaning of the Hebrew words; but it would serve no good purpose to give ourselves much uneasiness about them, for it is quite enough if we understand the meaning and design of the Prophet. He draws a picture of frightful desolation, as if he had said that Idumea shall be destroyed so as to be without inhabitants, and instead of men it shall be inhabited by frightful beasts. This reward is most justly reaped by the ambition of those who built costly palaces to be, as we have already said, monuments of their name and reputation. Yet this is also a punishment threatened against the cruelty of a wicked nation, which was eagerly bent on the oppression of neighbours and brethren.
Though we cannot absolutely determine whether the Prophet means witches, or goblins, or satyrs and fauns, yet it is universally agreed that these words denote animals which have the shape of men. We see also what various delusions are practiced by Satan, what phantoms and hideous monsters are seen, and what sounds and noises are heard. But of these we have already spoken under the thirteenth chapter. 21
The sin which God punished so severely in a single nation, is common to almost every nation; for hardly ever are those splendid buildings reared without committing much violence and injustice against the poor, and giving great and numerous annoyances to others; so that the lime, and stones, and timber, are filled with blood in the sight of God. Therefore, as Habakkuk says,
“the stone shall cry out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber shall bear witness to it.” (Hab 2:11.)
Let us not wonder, therefore, at those dreadful changes, when ambition lays hold on plunder and wicked extortions, but let us contemplate the righteous judgments of God.
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Calvin: Isa 34:16 - -- 16.Inquire at the book of Jehovah By “the book of the Lord” some understand this prophecy, as if he had enjoined them to read attentively this pr...
16.Inquire at the book of Jehovah By “the book of the Lord” some understand this prophecy, as if he had enjoined them to read attentively this prediction; for not even in the minutest point will it fail at the appointed time, as he will afterwards add. Others explain it more ingeniously as denoting the eternal decree of God; “inquire if such be not the purpose of God;” but this exposition is not sufficiently natural. I willingly interpret it as denoting the Law itself, which by way of eminence is called “the book of the Lord;” for from the Law, as from its source, the Prophets drew their doctrine, as we have frequently remarked.
Lest the strangeness of the event should prevent the prediction from being believed, Isaiah says that the Jews had been warned of it long before; and thus he indirectly censures the unbelief of those who stared at the announcement, as. if it had been something uncommon. He appropriately brings them back to the Law, in which God frequently declares that he will take care of his people, and that he will punish the wicked and reprobate. Moses having long ago spoken in this manner, the Prophet says that there is no reason why it should be difficult to believe what he foretells, since he brings forward nothing new, but only confirms now what Moses declared and testified. Such appears to me to be the natural meaning of the Prophet, and by these words he intended to fortify the Jews, patiently to look for what the Lord promised, and fully to believe that all that had. been foretold about the Edomites and the other adversaries of the Church would at length be actually fulfilled, since Moses was a credible witness, that God would always be the avenger of his people. Besides, it was proper that they should be reminded of this, in order that, when these things should befall the Edomites, they might not think that they had happened by chance, but might know that they were brought about by the judgment of God. Such is the rebellion of men, that they do not believe God when he forewarns them, and what afterwards takes place by the judgment of God is ascribed by them to fortune. Isaiah therefore meets this, and bids them inquire at Moses, whose authority they all revered.
Not one of those; that is, of the animals; for the Hebrew writers employ these terms,
For his mouth hath commanded He confirms what he formerly said; for although the works of God are sufficiently plain, yet by his mouth, that is, by the word, he makes them plainer to us, that we may see them more clearly. And this is the true contemplation of the works of God, when we keep our eye fixed on the mirror of the word; for otherwise our boldness is carried to excess, and we tke greater liberty than is proper, if heavenly doctrine do not guide us like a lamp. This ought therefore to restrain the boldness and rashness of men, who, despising the doctrine of the word, wish to dispute and form opinions about the judgments of God and all his worlds. If they “inquired at the book,” and asked at the mouth of the Lord, we should see greater piety and religion among them.
Yet by “the mouth of the Lord” the Prophet intended to confirm the vengeance which he had foretold, because nothing that has come out of God’s holy mouth can fail of its effect. Isaiah affirms that what God has once decreed, and published in his own name, cannot be reversed. By this shield he thus wards off all the doubts which quickly arise, whenever the promises of God go beyond our senses. Sometimes, indeed, he threatens conditionally, as he threatened the Ninevites, (Jon 1:2,) Pharaoh, (Gen 12:17,) and Abimelech, (Gen 20:3,) whom he spared, because they repented; but when he has once determined to revenge and punish, he gives actual proof that he is not less true and powerful than when he promised salvation to his people. The agreement of the words Mouth and Spirit makes it still more evident.
And his Spirit hath gathered them Although “the breath of the mouth” often means the same thing as “speech,” and although it is customary with the Hebrew writers to repeat the same thing twice, yet here he alludes elegantly to the breath, from which the words proceed, and by which they are formed; as if he had said that this prediction is abundantly powerful, because the same God who by his voice commanded the brute animals to possess the land of Edom, will bring them by merely breathing. He speaks of a secret influence; and we ought not to wonder that the slightest expression of the will of God causes all the animals to assemble, as happened at the flood, (Gen 7:15,) and likewise at the very creation of the world, when, as Moses relates, all the animals were gathered together, by the command of God, to the first man, that they might be subject to his authority. (Gen 2:19.) And undoubtedly they would have continued to be subject and obedient to him, had not his own rebellion deprived him of that power and authority; but when he revolted from God, the animals at the same time began to refuse subjection and to attack him.
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Calvin: Isa 34:17 - -- 17.And he hath cast the lot for them He says that to those wild beasts and monsters there hath been granted a secure and permanent habitation, from w...
17.And he hath cast the lot for them He says that to those wild beasts and monsters there hath been granted a secure and permanent habitation, from which they cannot be easily banished or driven out; because God hath allotted it to them as.their portion by inheritance. This means that the whole of Idumea is at the disposal of the Lord, to drive out the inhabitants, and to grant possession of it to whomsoever he pleases, either wild beasts, or birds, or monsters.
Hence infer that it is vain for men ever to promise themselves a permanent abode, unless so far as every person has obtained his place “by lot,” and on the express condition that he shall instantly leave it, whenever God calls. We lead a dependent life wherever he supports us; and either on our native soil, or at a distance from our fatherland, we are strangers. If he shall be pleased to give us a peaceable habitation for a long time in one place, it will only be by his special favor that we shall dwell there; and as soon as he thinks proper, he will constrain us to change our abode. Besides, if we acknowledge that a residence in this or that country has been appointed to us by God, we may dwell in it with safety and composure; for if he keeps wild beasts in possession of the place which he has allotted to them, how much more will he preserve men, for whose sake he created heaven, earth, the seas, and all that they contain?
Defender -> Isa 34:5
Defender: Isa 34:5 - -- Idumea is the land of Edom, and there are indications that Christ will return first to that land of the cursed Edomites (Oba 1:18; Mal 1:3, Mal 1:4), ...
Idumea is the land of Edom, and there are indications that Christ will return first to that land of the cursed Edomites (Oba 1:18; Mal 1:3, Mal 1:4), then proceed to Jerusalem (compare Isa 63:1-4), all the way treading the terrible "winepress of the wrath of God," wearing a "vesture dipped in blood" (Rev 14:19, Rev 14:20; Rev 19:13). Note also Isa 34:6 which reveals that "the Lord hath ... a great slaughter in the land of Idumea." The distance from Bozrah (Isa 34:6) to Jerusalem is about 1600 furlongs (Rev 14:20)."
TSK: Isa 34:5 - -- my sword : Deu 32:14, Deu 32:42; Psa 17:13; Jer 46:10, Jer 47:6; Eze 21:3-5, Eze 21:9-11; Zep 2:12; Rev 1:16
upon Idumea : Isa 63:1; Psa 137:7; Jer. 4...
my sword : Deu 32:14, Deu 32:42; Psa 17:13; Jer 46:10, Jer 47:6; Eze 21:3-5, Eze 21:9-11; Zep 2:12; Rev 1:16
upon Idumea : Isa 63:1; Psa 137:7; Jer. 49:7-22; Eze 25:12-14; Amo 1:11, Amo 1:12; Oba 1:1-9; Mal 1:4
the people : Deu 27:15-26, Deu 29:18-21; Mat 25:41; 1Co 16:22; Gal 3:10; 2Pe 2:14
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TSK: Isa 34:6 - -- filled : Isa 63:3; Jer 49:13; Eze 21:4, Eze 21:5, Eze 21:10
the fat : Deu 32:14
the Lord hath : Isa 34:5, Isa 63:1; Jer 50:27, Jer 51:40; Eze 39:17-20...
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TSK: Isa 34:7 - -- unicorns : or, rhinoceroses, Num 23:22, Num 24:8; Deu 33:17; Job 39:9, Job 39:10; Psa 92:10
the bullocks : Psa 68:30; Jer 46:21, Jer 50:11, Jer 50:27
...
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TSK: Isa 34:8 - -- Isa 26:21, Isa 35:4, Isa 49:26, Isa 59:17, Isa 59:18, Isa 61:2, Isa 63:4; Deu 32:35, Deu 32:41-43; Psa 94:1; Jer 46:10; Mic 6:1; Luk 18:7; Rom 2:5, Ro...
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TSK: Isa 34:9 - -- Gen 19:28; Deu 29:23; Job 18:15; Psa 11:6; Luk 17:29; Jud 1:7; Rev 19:20; Rev 21:8
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TSK: Isa 34:10 - -- shall not : Isa 1:31, Isa 66:24; Jer 7:20; Eze 20:47, Eze 20:48; Mar 9:43-48
the smoke : Rev 14:10,Rev 14:11, Rev 18:18, Rev 19:3
from : Isa 13:20; Ez...
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TSK: Isa 34:11 - -- cormorant : or, pelican, Isa 13:20-22, Isa 14:23; Zep 2:14; Rev 18:2, Rev 18:21-23
stretch : 2Sa 8:2; 2Ki 21:13; Lam 2:8; Mal 1:3, Mal 1:4
cormorant : or, pelican, Isa 13:20-22, Isa 14:23; Zep 2:14; Rev 18:2, Rev 18:21-23
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TSK: Isa 34:12 - -- call : Isa 3:6-8; Ecc 10:16, Ecc 10:17
nothing : Isa 41:24; 1Co 8:4, 1Co 13:2; 2Co 12:11
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TSK: Isa 34:13 - -- thorns : Isa 32:13, Isa 32:14; Hos 9:6; Zep 2:9
an habitation : Isa 13:21, Isa 13:22, Isa 35:7; Jer 9:11, Jer 10:22, Jer 49:33, Jer 50:39, Jer 50:40, ...
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TSK: Isa 34:14 - -- The wild beasts of the desert : Heb. Ziim , Isa 13:21 *marg.
the wild beasts of the island : Heb. Ijim, Isa 13:22 *marg.
screech owl : or, night-mon...
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TSK: Isa 34:16 - -- Seek : Isa 30:8; Deu 31:21; Jos 1:8; Pro 23:12; Dan 10:21; Amo 3:7; Mal 3:16; Joh 5:39, Joh 10:35; 2Pe 1:19; Mat 5:18; Luk 21:33
my mouth : Gen 6:17; ...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Isa 34:5 - -- For my sword shall be bathed in heaven - A sword is an instrument of vengeance, and is often so used in the Scriptures, because it was often em...
For my sword shall be bathed in heaven - A sword is an instrument of vengeance, and is often so used in the Scriptures, because it was often employed in capital punishments (see the note at Isa 27:1). This passage bas given much perplexity to commentators, on account of the apparent want of meaning of the expression that the sword would be bathed in heaven. Lowth reads it:
For my sword is made bare in the heavens;
Following in this the Chaldee which reads
And the sword shall devour,
And it shall be satiate, and made drunk with their blood.
And thus in Deu 32:42, a similar figure is used respecting arrows, the instruments also of war and vengeance:
I will make mine arrows drunk with blood;
And my sword shall devour flesh.
A similar figure is often used in Oriental writers, where the sword is represented as glutted, satiated, or made drunk with blood (see Rosenmuller on Deu 32:42). Thus Bohaddinus, in the lift of Saladin, in describing a battle in which there was a great slaughter, says, ‘ The swords drank of their blood until they were intoxicated.’ The idea here is, however, not that the sword of the Lord was made drunk with blood in heaven, but that it was intoxicated, or made furious with wrath; it was excited as an intoxicated man is who is under ungovernable passions; it was in heaven that the wrath commenced, and the sword of divine justice rushed forth as if intoxicated, to destroy all before it. There are few figures, even in Isaiah, that are more bold than this.
It shall come down upon Idumea - (see the Analysis of the chapter for the situation of Idumea, and for the causes why it was to be devoted to destruction).
Upon the people of my curse - The people devoted to destruction.
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Barnes: Isa 34:6 - -- The sword of the Lord is filled with blood - The idea here is taken from the notion of sacrifice, and is, that God would devote to sacrifice, o...
The sword of the Lord is filled with blood - The idea here is taken from the notion of sacrifice, and is, that God would devote to sacrifice, or to destruction, the inhabitants of Idumea. With reference to that, he says, that his sword, the instrument of slaughter, would be satiated with blood. "It is made fat with fatness."The allusion here is to the sacrifices which were made for sin, in which the blood. and the fat were devoted to God as an offering (see Lev. 7)
With the blood of lambs and goats - These were the animals which were usually offered in sacrifice to God among the Jews. and to speak of a sacrifice was the same as to speak of the offering of rams, lambs, bullocks, etc. Yet it is evident that they denote here the people of Idumea, and that these terms are used to keep up the image of a sacrifice. The idea of sacrifice was always connected with that of slaughter, as the animals were slaughtered before they were offered. So here, the idea is, that there would be a great slaughter in Idumea; that it would be so far of the nature of a sacrifice that they would be devoted to God and to his cause. It is not probable that any particular classes of people are denoted by the different animals mentioned here, as the animals here mentioned include all, or nearly all those usually offered in sacrifice, the expressions denote simply that all classes of people in Idumea would be devoted to the slaughter. Grotius, however, supposes that the following classes are intended by the animals specified, to wit, by the lambs, the people in general; by the goats, the priests; by the rams, the opulent inhabitants.
For the Lord hath a sacrifice in Bozrah - Bozrah is mentioned here as one of the chief cities of Idumea. It was a city of great antiquity, and was known among the Greeks and Romans by the name of Bostra. It is generally mentioned in the Scriptunes as a city of the Edomites Isa 63:1; Jer 49:13, Jer 49:22; Amo 1:12; but once it is mentioned as a city of Moab Jer 48:24. It probably belonged at different periods to both nations, as in their wars the possession of cities often passed into different hands. Bozrah lay southeast of Edrei, one of the capitals of Bashan, and was thus not properly within the limits of the Edomites, but was north of the Ammonites, or in the region of Auranitis, or in what is now called tho Houran. It is evident, therefore, that in the time of Isaiah, the Edomites had extended their conquests to that region.
According to Burckhardt, who visited the Houran, and who went to Bozrah, it is at this day one of the most important cities there. ‘ It is situated,’ says he, ‘ in the open plain, and is at present the last inhabited place in the southeast extremity of the Houran; it was formerly the capital of the Arabia Provincia, and is now, including its ruins, the largest town in the Houran. It is of an oval shape, its greatest length being from east to west; its circumference is three quarters of an hour. It was anciently encompassed with a thick wall, which gave it the reputation of great strength Many parts of this wall, especially on the west side, remain; it was constructed of stones of moderate size, strongly cemented together. The south, and southeast quarters are covered with ruins of private dwellings, the walls Of many of which are still standing, but the roofs are fallen in. The style of building seems to have been similar to that observed in all the other ancient towns of the Houran. On the west side are springs of fresh water, of which I counted five beyond the precincts of the town, and six within the walls; their waters unite with a rivulet whose source is on the northwest side, within the town, and which loses itself in the southern plain at several hours’ distance; it is called by the Arabs, El Djeheir. The principal ruins of Bozrah are the following: A square building which within is circular, and has many arches and niches in the wall.
The diameter of the arounda is four paces; its roof has fallen in, but the walls are entire. It appears to have been a Greek church. An oblong square building, called by the natives Deir Boheiry, or the Monastery of the priest Boheiry. The gate of an ancient house com municating with the ruins of an edifice, the only remains of which is a large semicircular vault. The great mosque of Bozrah, which is certainly coeval with the first era of Mahometanism, and is commonly ascribed to Omar el Khattah. The walls of the mosque are covered with a fine coat of plaster, upon which are many Curie inscriptions in bas-relief, running all round the wall The remains of a temple, situated on the side of a long street which runs across the whole town, and terminates at the western gate,’ etc. Of these, and other magnificent ruins of temples, theaters, and palaces, all attesting its former importance, Burckhardt has given a copious description in his Travels in Syria, pp. 226-235, Quarto Ed. LoRd. 1822.
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Barnes: Isa 34:7 - -- And the unicorns - Margin, ‘ Rhinoceros’ ( ראמים re 'ēmı̂ym from ראם re 'êm ). This was evidently an anima...
And the unicorns - Margin, ‘ Rhinoceros’ (
In appearance they resemble the Guinea pig. Their legs are of the same height, but the form of their feet is unique; instead of nails and claws, they have three toes in front and four behind, and they walk. like rabbits, on the whole length of the foot. The Arabs call it El Oueber, and know no other name for it. It lives upon the scanty herbage with which the rain in the neighborhood of springs supplies it. It does not burrow in the earth, its feet not being calculated for that purpose; but it conceals itself in the natural holes or clefts which it finds in the rocks.’ (Journey through Arabia Petrea, pp. 106, 107. Lond. 8vo. 1836.) Taylor (Heb. Con.) supposes it means the rhinoceros; a fierce animal that has a single horn on the nose, which is very strong, and which sometimes grows to the height of thirty-seven inches. The ancient versions certainly regarded the word as denoting an animal with a single horn. It denotes here, evidently, some strong, fierce, and wild animal that was horned Psa 22:21, but perhaps it is not possible to determine precisely what animal is meant. For a more full investigation in reference to the kind of animal denoted by the word reem, see the notes at Job 39:9. Here it represents that portion of the people which was strong, warlike, and hitherto unvanquished, and who regarded themselves as invincible.
Shall come down - Shall be subdued, humbled, destroyed.
With them - With the lambs and goats mentioned in Isa 34:6. All classes of the people shall be subdued and subjected to the slaughter.
And the bullocks with the bulls - The young bulls with the old. All shall come down together - the fierce and strong animals representing the fierce and strong people.
And their land shall be soaked with blood - Margin, ‘ Drunken;’ the same word which is rendered ‘ bathed’ in Isa 34:5.
Their dust made fat - Their land manured and made rich with the slain. A battlefield is usually distinguished afterward for its fertility. The field of Waterloo has thus been celebrated, since the great battle there, for producing rank and luxuriant harvests.
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Barnes: Isa 34:8 - -- For it is the day of the Lord’ s vengeance - A time when Yahweh will take vengeance. The year of recompenses for the controversy of Z...
For it is the day of the Lord’ s vengeance - A time when Yahweh will take vengeance.
The year of recompenses for the controversy of Zion - The time when he will recompense, that is, punish those who have had a controversy with Zion.
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Barnes: Isa 34:9 - -- And the streams thereof - The idea here is, that there would be as great and awful a destruction as if the streams everywhere should become pit...
And the streams thereof - The idea here is, that there would be as great and awful a destruction as if the streams everywhere should become pitch or resin, which would be set on fire, and which would fill the land with flame. This image is very striking, as we may see by supposing the rivers and streams in any land to flow not with water, but with heated pitch, turpentine, or tar, and that this was all suddenly kindled into a flame. It cannot be supposed that this is to be taken literally. The image is evidently taken from the destruction of Sodom and Gamorrah (Gen 19:25-28), an image which is more fully used in reference to the same subject in Jer 49:17-18 : ‘ And Edom shall be a desolation;... as in the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the neighbor cities thereof, saith the Lord, no man shall abide there, neither shall a son of man dwell in it.’
And the dust thereof into brimstone - The ruin shall be as entire as if all the soil were turned into brimstone, which should be ignited and left burning.
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Barnes: Isa 34:10 - -- It shall not be quenched night nor day - That is, the burning brimstone and pitch Isa 34:9, the emblem of perpetual and entire desolation, shal...
It shall not be quenched night nor day - That is, the burning brimstone and pitch Isa 34:9, the emblem of perpetual and entire desolation, shall not be extinguished.
The smoke thereof shall go up for ever - Every river and rivulet is Supposed to be heated pitch, and every particle of dust sulphur, and a 1 on fire, sending up from an extended region dense columns of smoke to heaven. No idea of ruin could be more sublime; no idea of the vengeance of God more terrible. This image has been copied by John to describe the future woes of the wicked Rev 14:11, and of mystical Babylon Rev 18:9, Rev 18:18; Rev 19:2-3.
From generation to generation it shall lie waste - Full confirmation of this may be seen in the travels of Seetsen, of Burckhardt, of Volney, of Irby, and Mangles, extracts of which have been collected and arranged by Keith (Evidences of Prophecy, pp. 135-168). Thus Volney says, ‘ From the reports of the Arabs as of Bakir, and the inhabitants of Gaza, who frequently go to Maan and Karak, on the road of the pilgrims, there are to the southeast of the lake Asphaltites (Dead Sea), within three days’ journey, upward of thirty ruined towns, absolutely deserted. Several of them have large edifices, with columns that may have belonged to the ancient temples, or at least to Greek churches. The Arabs sometimes make use of them to fold cattle in; but, in general, avoid them on account of the enormous scorpions with which they swarm.’ (Volney’ s Travels, vol. ii. pp. 344-346.) It is remarkable that an infidel, as Volney was, should in this, as in numerous other instances, have given a minute confirmation of the ancient prophecies.
Seetsen says (Travels, p. 46), that he was told, that, ‘ at the distance of two days and a half from Hebron he would final considerable ruins of the ancient city of Abde, and that for all the rest of the journey be would see no place of habitation; he would meet only with a few tribes of wandering Arabs.’ Burckhardt has given the following description on of the eastern boundary of Edom, and of the adjoining part of Arabia Petrea: ‘ It might with truth be called Petrea, not only on account of its rocky mountains, but also of the elevated plain already described (that is, Shera (Seir), the territory of the Edomites, Travels, pp. 410, 435), ‘ which is so much covered with stones, especially flints, that it may with great propriety be called a stony desert, although susceptible of culture; in many places it is grown over with wild herbs, and must once have been thickly inhabited, for the traces of many towns and villages are met with on both sides of the Hadj road between Maan and Akaba, as well as between Mean and the plains of Houran, in which direction also are many springs.
At present all this country is a desert, and Maan is the only inhabited place in it.’ (Burckhardt’ s Travels, p. 436.) Of the remains of ancient cities still exposed to view in different places throughout Idumea, Burckhardt describes the ruins of a large town, of which nothing remains but broken walls anti heaps of stones; the ruins of several villages in its vicinity (p. 418); the ruins of an ancient city, consisting of large heaps of hewn blocks of siliceous stone; and the extensive ruins of Arindela, an ancient town of Palestina Terria (p. 441). ‘ The following ruined places are situated in Djebal Shera (Mount Seir), to the south and southwest of Wady Musa - Kalaat Beni Madha, Djerba, Basta, Eyl, Ferdakh, Anyk, Bir el Beytar, Shemakh, and Syk’ (p. 444). Burckhardt also gives a most interesting description of the ruins of the ancient Petra which he discovered, the ancient capital of Edom, but which is too long to be transcribed here (see his Travels, pp. 422-432; compare the note at Isa 16:1).
None shall pass through it forever and ever - That is, it shall not be a country through which caravans shall pass; there shrill be no roads, and it shall not be deemed safe to travel through it. It will be recollected that the original source of all their calamities, and the cause of all the judgments that came upon them, was the fact that they would not let the children of Israel pass peaceably through their land on their way to Canaan (see the Introduction to the chapter). As a punishment for this, God now says that their land shall not be passed through; it shall not be a thoroughfare; there shall be no travelers in it. God usually directs his punishment of individuals and of nations in the line of their offences, and thus his judgments become commonly a recompence in kind. Thus in 2Sa 22:26-27, it is said:
With the merciful, thou wilt show thyself merciful;
And with the upright man thou wilt show thyself upright.
With the pure thou wilt show thyself pure;
And with the froward thou wilt show thyself unsavory.
In accordance with this prediction that no one should pass through Edom, Volney (Travels, vol. ii. p. 344) says, ‘ The country has not been visited by any traveler, but it well merits Such an attention.’ Thus Burckhardt (Travels, p. 421) says, after he had entered, on the northeast, the territories of the Edomites, that he ‘ was without protection in the midst of a desert where no traveler had ever before been seen. It was then,’ he adds, ‘ that for the first time he had ever felt fear during his travels in the desert, and his route thither was the most dangerous he had ever traveled’ (p. 400). ‘ Seetsen, on a piece of paper pasted against the wall, notified his having penetrated the country in a direct line between the Dead Sea and Mount Sinai (through Idumea), a route never before accomplished.’ (Burckhardt’ s Syria, p. 553.) Burckhardt had determined to attempt to pass the same way as being the shortest way to Jerusalem; but he was repeatedly told it was impossible; and the difficulty of the journey is illustrated in the Travels of Captains Irby and Mangles. They offered five hundred piastres to an Arab tribe if they would conduct them to Wady Musa, but nothing would induce them to consent. ‘ They said they would not go if we would give them five thousand piastres, observing that money was of no use to a man if he lost his life’ (p. 349). So strikingly has this prediction been fulfilled.
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Barnes: Isa 34:11 - -- But the cormorant - This and the following verses contain a description of the desolations of Edom in language remarkably similar to that emplo...
But the cormorant - This and the following verses contain a description of the desolations of Edom in language remarkably similar to that employed in the account of the destruction of Babylon Isa 13:20-22; Isa 14:23. The word here translated ‘ cormorant’ (
And the bittern shall possess it - For a description of the bittern, see the note at Isa 14:23.
The owl also and the raven - Well known birds that occupy deserts, and old ruins of houses or towns. The image here is that of desolation and ruin; and the sense is, that the land would be reduced to a waste that would not be inhabited by man, but would be given up to wild animals. How well this agrees with Edom, may be seen in the Travels of Burckhardt, Seetsen, and others. In regard to the fact that the cormorant (
And he shall stretch out upon it - This is an illusion to the fact that an architect uses a line, which is employed to lay out his work (see the note at Isa 28:17).
The line of confusion - A similar expression occurs in 2Ki 21:13 : ‘ I will stretch over Jerusalem the line of Samaria, and the plummet of the house of Ahab;’ that is, I will apply the same measure and rule of destruction to Jerusalem that has been applied to Samaria. So Edom would be marked out for desolation. It was the work which God had laid out, and which he intended to perform.
And the stones of emptiness - Probably the plummet which the architect commonly employed with his line (see the note at Isa 28:17). It is a fact, however, that Edom is at present an extended waste of stones and barren rocks. ‘ We had before us an immense expanse of dreary country, entirely covered with black flints, with here and there some hilly chain rising from the plain.’ (Burckhardt’ s Travels in Syria, p. 445.)
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Barnes: Isa 34:12 - -- They shall call the nobles thereof to the kingdom - A more correct rendering of this would be, ‘ As to the nobles, they shall call them, b...
They shall call the nobles thereof to the kingdom - A more correct rendering of this would be, ‘ As to the nobles, they shall call them, but there shall be there no kingdom.’ The idea is, that the kingdom would be desolate; there would be no people to rule. Or, there will be no nobles there who shall survive the destruction, and who can undertake the government of the state. The idea is taken from a government or constitution where the monarch is chosen from the ranks of the nobility. Idumea was formerly governed, as we have seen (see the Introduction to the chapter), by dukes or princes; and it is probable that when it became a monarchy it was a part of the constitution that the sovereign should be chosen from their ranks. The idea here is, that none would be left who could be called to the throne; or if any were left, they would be unwilling to undertake the government of a country where all was disorder and confusion.
And all her princes shall be nothing - Long since Idumea has ceased to be a kingdom, and there are neither nobles nor princes there, nor are there any remains of an organized and independent government.
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Barnes: Isa 34:13 - -- And thorns ... - (see the note at Isa 5:6) It shall be an habitation of dragons - On the meaning of the word ‘ dragons,’ see t...
And thorns ... - (see the note at Isa 5:6)
It shall be an habitation of dragons - On the meaning of the word ‘ dragons,’ see the note at Isa 13:22.
Court for owls - A place of resort, a residence of owls. The word rendered ‘ court’ (
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Barnes: Isa 34:14 - -- The wild beasts of the desert - There is in the original here a paronomasia, which cannot be conveyed in a translation. The word rendered, R...
The wild beasts of the desert - There is in the original here a paronomasia, which cannot be conveyed in a translation. The word rendered, ‘ wild beasts of the desert’ (
The wild beasts of the island - Margin, ‘ Ijim.’ Hebrew,
And the satyr - (see the note at Isa 13:21).
Shall cry to his fellow - A most striking description of the desolation, when all that is heard among the ruins shall be the doleful cry of wild beasts.
The screech-owl - Margin, ‘ Night-monster.’ The word
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Barnes: Isa 34:15 - -- There shall the great owl - ( קפוז qı̂pôz ). Gesenius supposes that this is the arrow-snake, so called from its darting or springi...
There shall the great owl - (
Under her shadow - This might be done by the serpent that should coil up and cherish her young.
The vultures ... - The black vulture, according to Bochart; according to Gesenius, the kite, or falcon so called from its swift flight. Either of them will suit the connection.
Also be gathered, every one with her mate - They shall make their nests there; that is, this shall be their secure, undisturbed retreat.
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Barnes: Isa 34:16 - -- Seek ye out - Lock carefully at the prediction, and its fulfillment. This seems to be addressed to the inhabitants of that land, or to any who ...
Seek ye out - Lock carefully at the prediction, and its fulfillment. This seems to be addressed to the inhabitants of that land, or to any who might doubt, or be disposed to examine. They were invited to compare the prediction with the fulfillment, and see how literally all would be fulfilled - an examination which may be made now, and the prediction will be seen to have been accomplished with most surprising particularity and accuracy.
The book of the Lord - The book of Yahweh, which he has caused to be written, referring, perhaps, especially to what Isaiah has here recorded; including also what had been uttered by the other prophets in regard to Edom. The main reference is, however, doubtless, to what Isaiah has written; and the invitation is to compare his predictions with the certain and remarkable evidence of the fulfillment. ‘ The prophet evidently contemplated the insertion of his prophecy among the sacred books of the Jews, from which those that followed him might judge of the correctness of the prophecy’ (Noyes). That a collection of the various prophetic books was made, constituting one book or volume, and regarded as the work of inspiration, is well known, and is referred to during the captivity in Babylon by Daniel Isa 9:2. The direction to search that book accords with the command of the Saviour Joh 5:39, and the direction of Nicodemus Joh 7:32, to search the Scriptures.
No one of these shall fail - Not one of these predictions, or these things which have been spoken.
None shall want her mate - That is, none of the things which I have spoken shall want a fulfillment as its companion. The language is here evidently taken from the pairing of animals, and denotes that all that is spoken shall be entirely fulfilled. Some have understood tilts as referring to the wild animals of which he had spoken, and as meaning that in desolate Idumea they should be appropriately paired, and should breed and increase in abundance. But the more natural interpretation is to refer it to the predictions of the prophet, as meaning that no one thing which he had uttered should want a complete fulfillment.
For my mouth - The word ‘ my’ is not in the Hebrew. The Hebrew phrase is
And his spirit - The Spirit of God; that is, Yahweh himself.
Hath gathered them - Will collect, or assemble; that is, the wild beasts spoken of in the previous verses that shall occupy desolate Idumea. It shall be the agency of God that shall bring them up upon the land to occupy it forever.
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Barnes: Isa 34:17 - -- And he hath cast the lot for them - He hath assigned to them the land of Edom to be occupied by them as their portion. This language is taken f...
And he hath cast the lot for them - He hath assigned to them the land of Edom to be occupied by them as their portion. This language is taken from the fact that countries were commonly apportioned, particularly among conquerors, by the lot. In this way Judea was divided among the tribes of Israel Num 26:55-56.
His hand hath divided it unto them by line - He has marked out, as a surveyor does, the land of Edom as the dwelling-place of the beasts of the forest. A land was usually surveyed and divided into proper parts or portions before the lot was cast Jos 18:4-6.
They shall possess it - The wild beasts mentioned in the previous verses. The testimony of all travelers demonstrates that thus far this prediction has been strikingly fulfilled.
Poole: Isa 34:5 - -- Shall be bathed in the blood of these people Heb. is or shall be made drunk. In heaven ; either,
1. In my church, which is called heaven , Dan 8:1...
Shall be bathed in the blood of these people Heb. is or shall be made drunk. In heaven ; either,
1. In my church, which is called heaven , Dan 8:10 Rev 4:1 12:1 , in and against which these enemies are said to be gathered together. Or,
2. In the highest heaven, where God dwells; in which this is said to be done, because it was there decreed and appointed to be done.
Upon Idumea upon the Edomites, who, though they were nearly related to the Israelites, and were circumcised as well as they; yet were their most inveterate and implacable enemies, watching all opportunities, and being ready to join with all those that attempted, to destroy them; whereof we have many intimations and instances in Scripture. But these are not named exclusively, but rather comprehensively, and synecdochically, for all the enemies of God’ s church, of whom they were a considerable part, and an eminent type.
Upon the people of my curse to whom my curse belongs; or, whom I have cursed, and devoted to utter destruction, as this Hebrew word properly signifies.
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Poole: Isa 34:6 - -- Is filled with blood shall drink its fill of blood. The metaphor is here taken from a great glutton or drunkard, who is almost insatiable with meat a...
Is filled with blood shall drink its fill of blood. The metaphor is here taken from a great glutton or drunkard, who is almost insatiable with meat and drink.
With the blood of lambs and goats, with the fat of the kidneys of rams: by, lambs, and goats, and rams, he means people of all ranks and conditions, high and low, rich and poor. A sacrifice; so he calleth this bloody work, because it was done by God’ s command, and for his honour; and therefore was a service acceptable to him.
Bozrah a chief city of Edom, Isa 63:1 Jer 49:13 , and a type of those cities which should be most opposite and mischievous to God’ s people.
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Poole: Isa 34:7 - -- The unicorns Heb. the reemim . But what kind of beast this is, whether that beast which is commonly called an unicorn, which seems to be but a ficti...
The unicorns Heb. the reemim . But what kind of beast this is, whether that beast which is commonly called an unicorn, which seems to be but a fiction in the judgment of the learned, or a rhinoceros, or a wild ox or bull, it is needless to trouble the ordinary reader about it; and the learned may consult my Latin Synopsis upon Num 23:22 about it. It is confessed that it was a beast of great strength and fierceness; and it is certain that it is metephorically used in this place, to signify their princes and potentates.
Shall come down shall be humbled and cast down. The LXX. and Syriac render it,
they shall fall down as such beasts do when they have received a deadly blow. With them ; with the lambs, and goats, and rams, last mentioned, Isa 34:6 .
With fatness with the fat of the slain sacrifices, which shall he mingled with it.
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Poole: Isa 34:8 - -- This is the time which God hath long since appointed and fixed, to avenge the cause of his oppressed and persecuted people against all their enemies...
This is the time which God hath long since appointed and fixed, to avenge the cause of his oppressed and persecuted people against all their enemies.
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Poole: Isa 34:9 - -- The streams which seem most secure from this danger, and much more the land. Idumea shall be dealt with as Sodom and Gomorrah were, even utterly dest...
The streams which seem most secure from this danger, and much more the land. Idumea shall be dealt with as Sodom and Gomorrah were, even utterly destroyed, as it were, by fire, or burning pitch and brimstone thrown down upon it from heaven.
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Poole: Isa 34:10 - -- It shall be irrecoverably ruined, and shall remain as a spectacle of God’ s vengeance to all succeeding ages.
It shall be irrecoverably ruined, and shall remain as a spectacle of God’ s vengeance to all succeeding ages.
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Poole: Isa 34:11 - -- The cormorant and the bittern shall possess it, the owl also and the raven shall dwell in it the inhabitants shall be wholly cut off, and it shall be...
The cormorant and the bittern shall possess it, the owl also and the raven shall dwell in it the inhabitants shall be wholly cut off, and it shall be entirely possessed by those creatures which delight in deserts and waste places. See the same or like expressions in the like case, Isa 13:21,22 14:23 .
He shall stretch out upon it the line of confusion, and the stones of emptiness he shall use the line, or the stone or plummet joined to it, not to build them, but to mark them out to desolation and destruction, as workmen commonly use them to mark what they are to pull down.
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Poole: Isa 34:12 - -- They shall call the nobles thereof to the kingdom, but none shall be there they shall endeavour to heal their breaches, but in vain; the remnant of t...
They shall call the nobles thereof to the kingdom, but none shall be there they shall endeavour to heal their breaches, but in vain; the remnant of the people shall seek for any fit person, and offer the kingdom to him; but they shall not find any such who shall be willing to undertake the government.
Shall be nothing either shall be lost and cut off, or shall have no courage or strength left in them.
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Poole: Isa 34:13 - -- This is another mark and evidence of extreme desolation, as it is also, Hos 9:6 .
This is another mark and evidence of extreme desolation, as it is also, Hos 9:6 .
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Poole: Isa 34:14 - -- The satyr shall cry to his fellow: See Poole "Isa 13:21". See Poole "Isa 13:22" .
The screech owl also shall rest there because there shall be no m...
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Poole: Isa 34:15 - -- The great owl whether this or what other creature is meant by this Hebrew word, the learned reader may find largely discoursed in my Latin Synopsis u...
The great owl whether this or what other creature is meant by this Hebrew word, the learned reader may find largely discoursed in my Latin Synopsis upon this place; for others, it may suffice to know, what all agree in, that, whether it be a bird or a serpent, it is a creature that lives in desert places.
Make her nest, and lay, and hatch, and gather under her shadow as fearing no disturbance from any men.
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Poole: Isa 34:16 - -- Seek ye out of the book of the Lord, and read when this judgment is executed, if you peruse this book of holy writ, and particularly this prophecy of...
Seek ye out of the book of the Lord, and read when this judgment is executed, if you peruse this book of holy writ, and particularly this prophecy of mine, you will find that all things shall exactly come to pass as I have told you.
No one of these shall fail, none shall want her mate: as I have said, that the vultures should each have their mate, so shall it be; and this prophecy shall be exactly fulfilled, even in its smallest circumstances. His Spirit ; my Spirit; such sudden changes of persons being frequent here. And God’ s Spirit may be put for his might and power, as it is in many places of Scripture. Hath gathered them ; hath brought all these creatures together, as he formerly brought the creatures to Adam and to Noah, by an instinct which he put into them.
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Poole: Isa 34:17 - -- He hath divided the land to them, as it were, by lot and line, as Canaan was divided among the Israelites.
He hath divided the land to them, as it were, by lot and line, as Canaan was divided among the Israelites.
Haydock: Isa 34:5 - -- Heaven. Casting down the rebel angels. (St. Jerome) ---
The resolution to destroy the Idumeans, for their cruelty to the Jews, has been taken long...
Heaven. Casting down the rebel angels. (St. Jerome) ---
The resolution to destroy the Idumeans, for their cruelty to the Jews, has been taken long ago. All these expressions allude to the last judgment. (Calmet) ---
Idumea. Under the name of Idumea or Edom, a people that were enemies of God and his Church. (Challoner) ---
Assaradon fell upon Edom two years after Sennacherib's death. (Calmet) ---
No strong place like Bosra, shall rescue any from destruction at the last day. (Worthington)
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The unicorns. That is, the great and mighty. (Challoner)
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Haydock: Isa 34:8 - -- Recompenses. When the persecutors of Sion, that is, of the Church, shall receive their reward. (Challoner) ---
The Idumeans had frequently shown t...
Recompenses. When the persecutors of Sion, that is, of the Church, shall receive their reward. (Challoner) ---
The Idumeans had frequently shown their ill-will towards the Jews, 2 Paralipomenon xxviii. 17., and Amos i. 11. (Calmet) ---
Sion shall perish as the wicked in hell shall be tormented. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Isa 34:9 - -- Pitch. The soil was sulphureous, and became neglected, (ver. 10.) like the territory of Sodom. The people are now no more, and only a few miserable...
Pitch. The soil was sulphureous, and became neglected, (ver. 10.) like the territory of Sodom. The people are now no more, and only a few miserable Arabs pitch their tents there.
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Haydock: Isa 34:11 - -- Line. Intimating entire destruction, Lamentations ii. 8., and 4 Kings xi. 13. (Calmet) ---
Yet God will not punish more than people deserve. (Men...
Line. Intimating entire destruction, Lamentations ii. 8., and 4 Kings xi. 13. (Calmet) ---
Yet God will not punish more than people deserve. (Menochius)
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Dragons, Thannim, chap. xiii. 22. (Haydock) ---
Ostriches, or swans.
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Haydock: Isa 34:14 - -- Monsters. Literally, "Ass-centaurs." (Haydock) ---
Hebrew, "fishermen shall find islands," chap. xiii. 21. ---
Ones. Goats. ---
Lamia. Hebrew...
Monsters. Literally, "Ass-centaurs." (Haydock) ---
Hebrew, "fishermen shall find islands," chap. xiii. 21. ---
Ones. Goats. ---
Lamia. Hebrew lilith. Chaldean, "owl," the bird of Minerva, or the Moon, which the Arabs style Alilat. (Calmet) ---
Dicodorus (20) relates that Lamia was an African queen, who having last her children, was changed into a beast, and destroyed all the children she could catch; and the Jews deal still more in fables, (Calmet0 asserting that Lilith was the first wife of Adam, &c. (Buxtorf. Syn. 2.)
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Haydock: Isa 34:15 - -- Ericius. Hebrew, " kippoz, (Haydock) hath its nest." It may denote the serpent, acontias. (Bochart) ---
All this shews the desolation of the c...
Ericius. Hebrew, " kippoz, (Haydock) hath its nest." It may denote the serpent, acontias. (Bochart) ---
All this shews the desolation of the country.
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Haydock: Isa 34:16 - -- Read what I have written. ---
The other. All these beasts will be there, (Calmet) or all these declarations will be verified. (Haydock)
Read what I have written. ---
The other. All these beasts will be there, (Calmet) or all these declarations will be verified. (Haydock)
Gill: Isa 34:5 - -- For my sword shall be bathed in heaven,.... That is, the sword of the Lord, as it is called in the next verse Isa 34:6, and it is he that is speaking;...
For my sword shall be bathed in heaven,.... That is, the sword of the Lord, as it is called in the next verse Isa 34:6, and it is he that is speaking; it designs the vengeance of the Lord, the punishment he will inflict on the wicked, said to be "bathed in heaven", because determined and prepared there; the allusion may be to the bathing of swords in some sort of liquor, to harden or brighten them, and so fit them for use. Kimchi renders it, "my sword" which is "in heaven shall be bathed", that is, in the blood of the slain; "heaven" may denote the whole Roman Papal jurisdiction, as it does the whole Roman Pagan empire in Rev 12:7 and may design the principal men in it, those that are in the highest places and offices, in whom the sword of the Lord shall be first drenched, and be as it were satiated and inebriated with the blood of them:
behold, it shall come down upon Idumea; with great weight, force, and vengeance, having a commission from heaven to execute. Idumea is here particularly mentioned, because the Edomites were implacable enemies to the Jews, and so are here put for all the enemies of God's church and people, all the antichristian states, particularly Rome, which the Jews, as Jerom observes, understand by Edom or Idumea here:
upon the people of my curse to judgment; a very descriptive character of the Papists, the people of God's curse, and righteously so; those who have anathematized his people, and cursed them with bell, book, and candle, are anathematized by him, devoted to destruction, and doomed to be accursed, sentenced to ruin, and on whom judgment shall pass, and shall be executed; they shall hear, "go, ye cursed", both here and hereafter, at the fall of Babylon, and at the general judgment. The Targum is,
"because my sword is revealed in heaven; behold, upon Edom it is revealed, and upon the people whom I have condemned to judgment.''
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Gill: Isa 34:6 - -- The sword of the Lord is filled with blood,.... Multitudes being slain by it; the "Lord" here is that divine Person that is described as a warrior, as...
The sword of the Lord is filled with blood,.... Multitudes being slain by it; the "Lord" here is that divine Person that is described as a warrior, as a General of an army, with a sharp sword, by whom many are slain, such a number as that it is filled with the blood of them, Rev 19:11,
it is made fat with fatness: not only filled with the blood, but fattened by it; the allusion is to ravenous creatures gorged and sated with the blood of others, and thereby made fat; perhaps this may refer to Christian princes, the sword in the hand of the Lord, who shall be enriched with the plunder and spoil of the antichristian states:
and with the blood of lambs and goats, with the fat of the kidneys of rams. The Targum is,
"with the blood of kings and governors, with the fat of the kidneys princes;''
and Jarchi interprets them, of princes and rulers; but rather the common people are designed, or the common soldiers in the army, or however the inferior officers of it; kings, princes, and generals, being intended in the following verse Isa 34:7. It denotes the great carnage of all sorts and ranks of men made at this time, and which is described in Rev 19:18,
for the Lord hath a sacrifice in Bozrah, and a great slaughter in the land of Idumea: there seems to be two Bozrahs the Scripture speaks of, the one in Moab, Jer 48:24 and another in Edom, Isa 63:1 which is here meant, and was a chief city of the Edomites, and signifies a fortress, being no doubt a place well fortified; this is the Bostra of Ptolemy k, and which he places in Arabia Petraea. Aben Ezra says that some interpret it of Constantinople, the metropolis of the Ottoman empire; but it is best to understand it of Rome, as Menasseh ben Israel l does, and Idumea of the whole Roman jurisdiction; Rome being the chief city of the antichristian states, that great city, which John in his Revelation describes as reigning over the kings of the earth; here and in all the antichristian kingdoms will be a great "slaughter" of men, called a "sacrifice" of the Lord, because by his order and direction, and for the honour of his justice, and being acceptable to him; and perhaps there may be an allusion to the blood sacrifices being the Lord's; this slaughter and sacrifice is called the supper of the great God, Rev 19:17.
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Gill: Isa 34:7 - -- And the unicorns shall come down with them,.... With the lambs, goats, and rams; that is, either the rhinoceros, as some, there being no such creature...
And the unicorns shall come down with them,.... With the lambs, goats, and rams; that is, either the rhinoceros, as some, there being no such creature as the unicorn; or the buffaloes, as m others; these "shall fall", as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions render it, they shall be slain, as well as the rest; meaning, that along with the common soldiers, and inferior officers, the general officers should fall; and so the Targum,
"and the mighty shall be slain with them.''
R. Abraham Seba says n he read in a certain book, that the word here should not be read
and the bullocks with the bulls: or, as the Targum,
"and the rulers with the princes;''
the same with the kings, captains, and mighty men in Rev 19:18,
and their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat with fatness; Or, "their land shall be inebriated" o, or made drunk, with blood; and the dust thereof thickened by it, and made clods of with it, as the parched earth is watered with a plentiful shower, and the dust laid with it: this is a just retaliation to the whore of Rome, who has been made drunk with the blood of the saints, and now blood shall be given her to drink, even her own, with which she shall be filled, and welter and wallow in the clods of it, Rev 17:6.
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Gill: Isa 34:8 - -- For it is the day of the Lord's vengeance,.... The time which he has appointed to take vengeance on antichrist, his 1260 days, or years; being up, in...
For it is the day of the Lord's vengeance,.... The time which he has appointed to take vengeance on antichrist, his 1260 days, or years; being up, in which he is to reign; these being expired, the time is come for the Lord to avenge the blood of his saints; see Rev 18:20,
and the year of recompences for the controversy of Zion; the church of God, which has been for many ages abused and injured by the antichristian powers, for which the Lord will have a controversy with them; he will appear in favour of his people, and plead the cause of Zion, and recompense their enemies for all the injuries they have done them; then they that have led into captivity shall go into captivity, and they that have killed with the sword shall be killed with it, Rev 13:10 this will be a time of double recompence; and therefore perhaps the word is used in the plural number; it will be the time of rewarding antichrist as he has rewarded others; and it will be the time of the dead, that they shall be judged, and rewards given to God's servants the prophets, Rev 18:6. The Targum is,
"the year of recompence, to take vengeance of judgment for the injury of Zion.''
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Gill: Isa 34:9 - -- And the streams thereof shall be turned into pitch,.... The Septuagint render it, "the valleys"; the word signifying both rivers and valleys, most ren...
And the streams thereof shall be turned into pitch,.... The Septuagint render it, "the valleys"; the word signifying both rivers and valleys, most render it rivers or streams. The Targum is express,
"the rivers of Rome shall be turned into pitch;''
by which may be meant the maritime places belonging to the Romish jurisdiction, the same on which the third vial will be poured, by which the rivers and fountains of waters will become blood; and which refers to this very time, when blood shall be given to the whore of Rome to drink, Rev 16:4. The allusion, in this and some following clauses, is to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah; see Jer 49:17,
and the dust thereof into brimstone; and so easily take fire:
and the land thereof shall become burning pitch: plainly pointing to the destruction of Rome by fire, Rev 17:16.
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Gill: Isa 34:10 - -- It shall not be quenched night nor day,.... It will be long burning, and shall not be extinguished until it is utterly consumed. The burning of Rome w...
It shall not be quenched night nor day,.... It will be long burning, and shall not be extinguished until it is utterly consumed. The burning of Rome will continue long, especially the smoke of it; the kings of the earth, and others, are represented as standing and looking at it, and lamenting for it, Rev 18:9,
the smoke thereof shall go up for ever; this very phrase is what will be used by the saints in their "allelujahs", at the burning of Rome, Rev 19:3 with which compare Rev 14:11,
from generation to generation it shall lie waste; the land shall be no more manured and cultivated, nor the city rebuilt; when Babylon is once fallen, it shall never be raised up again, but always remain desolate, Rev 18:2,
none shall pass through it for ever and ever; no inhabitant in it, nor traveller through it; it will be so horrible and terrible, as none will care to dwell there, yea, not so much as to travel through it; see Jer 49:18.
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Gill: Isa 34:11 - -- But the cormorant and the bittern shall possess it,.... The word for "cormorant" is rendered a "pelican", in Psa 102:6 they were both unclean fowls ac...
But the cormorant and the bittern shall possess it,.... The word for "cormorant" is rendered a "pelican", in Psa 102:6 they were both unclean fowls according to the law, of which see Lev 11:17 and See Gill on Isa 14:23,
the owl also and the raven shall dwell in it; which were likewise unclean creatures; and these, with the former, and other creatures after mentioned, delight to dwell in desolate and ruinous places; and so Babylon or Rome being destroyed, will become a cage of every unclean and hateful bird, Rev 18:2,
and he shall stretch out upon it the line of confusion and the stones of emptiness; "he", that is, God, as Kimchi interprets it; the allusion is to builders, that make use of the line and plummet, as to build, so to pull down, that they may know what is to be pulled down, and how far they are to go; see 2Ki 21:13 and hereby it is signified, that as the destruction should be entire, nothing should be left but confusion and emptiness; and all should become "tohu" and "bohu", which are the words used here; and are the same that are used to express the confused chaos, the unformed and empty earth, Gen 1:2 so likewise that it should be by line and level, by rule and measure; or according to the rules of justice and equity.
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Gill: Isa 34:12 - -- They shall call the nobles thereof to the kingdom, but none shall be there,.... They shall call them to take upon them the kingdom and government, an...
They shall call the nobles thereof to the kingdom, but none shall be there,.... They shall call them to take upon them the kingdom and government, and there shall be none to do it, or that will care to do it; or rather there will be no kingdom to take unto them. The words may be rendered either, "as for the nobles thereof, not there a kingdom shall they be called" p; or, "the nobles shall call"; or, "they shall call the nobles", and "there shall be no kingdom" q; the kingdom of the beast, as it is called, Rev 16:10 shall be no more; and though the cardinals, who are like to nobles, may call for it, and expect it, or be called to it, yet to no purpose; this kingdom will not only be full of darkness, but utterly destroyed:
and all her princes shall be nothing; shall come to nothing; the above mentioned cardinals, who are clothed and live like princes, these shall be no more; the same with the merchants of the earth, which like the merchants of Tyre are princes, Rev 18:3.
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Gill: Isa 34:13 - -- And thorns shall come up in her palaces,.... Where their kings and princes dwelt, and kept their courts, popes and cardinals; here will be the tokens ...
And thorns shall come up in her palaces,.... Where their kings and princes dwelt, and kept their courts, popes and cardinals; here will be the tokens of God's curse, as thorns are, these being the people of his curse, as in Isa 34:5,
nettles and brambles in the fortresses thereof; alluding to "Bozrah" which signifies a fortress; referring to the towers and fortifications of the city of Rome, and all other fortified cities within its jurisdiction:
and it shall be a habitation of dragons; literally, as it figuratively had been the seat of the old dragon, the devil, and of the beast to whom the dragon gave his power, seat, and authority; and who, though he looked like a lamb, spoke like a dragon, Rev 12:3,
and a court for owls; or, "daughters of the owl"; or "ostriches", as some render it.
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Gill: Isa 34:14 - -- The wild beasts of the desert shall also meet with the wild beasts of the islands,.... In Rome, and take up their abode there; of these creatures, the...
The wild beasts of the desert shall also meet with the wild beasts of the islands,.... In Rome, and take up their abode there; of these creatures, the first of which the Targum renders monstrous ones, and the latter wild cats; see Gill on Isa 13:22,
and the satyr shall cry to his fellow; or the "hairy" one r; from which word the goat has its name; and these creatures are described by the ancients as half goats and half men; of which See Gill on Isa 13:21. The Targum renders it demons; and with this well agrees the account of Babylon or Rome as fallen, that it shall be the habitation of, devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, Rev 18:2,
the screech owl also shall rest there, and find for herself a place of rest; there being no inhabitants to disturb her. By the name "Lilith", it appears to be a night bird, which flies and is heard in the night. The Jews call a she demon by this name, which, they say s, has a human face, and has wings, and destroys children as soon as born; and therefore the Jews, especially in Germany, write upon the four corners of the bed of a new mother, Adam, Eve, out Lilith t; the same with the Lamia of the Romans; and so the Vulgate Latin here renders it.
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Gill: Isa 34:15 - -- There shall the great owl make her nest,.... Jarchi, Kimchi, and Ben Melech, say that "kippoz" here is the same with "kippod", rendered "bittern" in I...
There shall the great owl make her nest,.... Jarchi, Kimchi, and Ben Melech, say that "kippoz" here is the same with "kippod", rendered "bittern" in Isa 34:11 but Aben Ezra takes them to be two different birds; it is hard to say what is designed by it. Bochart thinks that one kind of serpent is here meant, so called from its leaping up, and which may be said to make nests, lay eggs and hatch them, as follows:
and lay, and hatch, and gather under her shadow; lay its eggs, sit upon them, and hatch them; or "break" them u, that is, the eggs, by sitting on them, when the young ones spring out of them; and then being hatched, and running about, gather them under their wing, especially when in any danger:
there shall the vultures also be gathered, everyone with her mate; which creatures usually gather together where dead carcasses lie.
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Gill: Isa 34:16 - -- Seek ye out of the book of the Lord, and read,.... Joseph Kimchi interprets this of the book of the law of Moses; which being consulted, it will appea...
Seek ye out of the book of the Lord, and read,.... Joseph Kimchi interprets this of the book of the law of Moses; which being consulted, it will appear that punishment was threatened to be inflicted on the enemies of God's people, particularly the Edomites. Jarchi thinks the book of Genesis is intended; in which we may read how every creature, with its mate, at the time of the flood, was gathered to Noah in the ark. Aben Ezra supposes the book of God's decrees is meant; in which, could it be seen, might be read all the particulars of this prophecy. But it seems best to understand it of this book of the prophecy of Isaiah; which being sought to, and read at the time when these predictions will be fulfilled, it will be easily seen, by comparing events with prophecies, how everything will be exactly accomplished; from whence may be concluded, this book being called the book of the Lord, that it was written by divine inspiration, as all other parts of the Bible are; which is a recommendation of them, and is a reason why they should be constantly applied unto, and diligently read. It may deserve some consideration, whether the book of the Revelation may not be designed; which, at the destruction of Babylon or Rome, will be proper to be looked into afresh, to see the agreement between the prophecies in it, and the then state of things respecting it, when it will be an habitation of devils and unclean birds:
not one of these shall fail: not one of these beasts or birds before mentioned shall be wanting here, or be "deprived" of its prey:
none shall want her mate; the satyr, or vulture, or any other, which will engage their continuance, and by which means there will be a fresh brood of them in succession for after ages:
for my mouth, it hath commanded them; these beasts and birds, to assemble in the above mentioned place:
and his spirit, it hath gathered them; the Spirit of the mouth of the Lord, his power, and his providence; as he gathered all creatures to Adam, to give them names; and to Noah, to be preserved with him in the ark; so, by a secret instinct; will he gather together these creatures, to inhabit the desolate places of Edom or Rome. The Targum is,
"for by his word they shall be gathered, and by his will they shall draw near.''
So Ben Melech interprets it of his will and pleasure.
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Gill: Isa 34:17 - -- And he hath cast the lot for them,.... The Targum adds,
"by his word:''
and his hand hath divided it unto them by line; the same adds,
"by hi...
And he hath cast the lot for them,.... The Targum adds,
"by his word:''
and his hand hath divided it unto them by line; the same adds,
"by his will.''
The allusion is to the dividing of the land of Canaan by lot and line, to the children of Israel, for their inheritance and possession; and in like manner, it is suggested, shall Rome and its territories be distributed to those wild beasts and birds of prey, and everyone shall know and take its proper place and portion:
they shall possess it for ever; as their inheritance, allotted and appointed to them:
from generation to generation shall they dwell therein: See Gill on Isa 34:10 where Jarchi, out of the Derash, has this note,
"this is the curse of Moses; the war of the Lord against Amalek, from generation to generation; from the generation of Moses to the generation of Saul; from thence to the generation of Mordecai; and from thence to the generation of the King Messiah.''
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:5; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:6; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:7; Isa 34:8; Isa 34:8; Isa 34:9; Isa 34:10; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:11; Isa 34:12; Isa 34:13; Isa 34:13; Isa 34:14; Isa 34:14; Isa 34:14; Isa 34:14; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:15; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:16; Isa 34:17; Isa 34:17; Isa 34:17
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NET Notes: Isa 34:8 Heb “a year of repayment for the strife of Zion.” The translation assumes that רִיב (riv) refers to Edom’s h...
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NET Notes: Isa 34:9 Heb “her”; the referent (Edom) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
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NET Notes: Isa 34:11 The metaphor in v. 11b emphasizes that God has carefully planned Edom’s demise.
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NET Notes: Isa 34:13 Heb “and she will be a settlement for wild dogs, a dwelling place for ostriches.” The translation assumes an emendation of חָ&...
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NET Notes: Isa 34:15 The precise meaning of דַּיָּה (dayyah) is uncertain, though the term appears to refer to some type of bird ...
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NET Notes: Isa 34:16 Heb “and his spirit, he gathers them.” The pronominal suffix (“them”) is feminine plural, referring to the birds mentioned in ...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:5 For my sword shall be ( d ) bathed in heaven: behold, it shall come down upon Edom, and upon the people of ( e ) my curse, to judgment.
( d ) I have ...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:6 The sword of the LORD is filled with blood, it is made fat with fatness, [and] with the blood of ( f ) lambs and goats, with the fat of the kidneys of...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:7 And the ( h ) unicorns shall come down with them, and the bulls with the bulls; and their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat wit...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:9 And its streams shall be turned into pitch, and its dust into ( i ) brimstone, and its land shall become burning pitch.
( i ) He alludes to the destr...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:11 But the cormorant ( k ) and the bittern shall possess it; the owl also and the raven shall dwell in it: and he shall stretch out upon it the line of (...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:12 ( m ) They shall call her nobles to the kingdom, but none [shall be] there, and all her princes shall be nothing.
( m ) Meaning, here will be neither...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:14 The wild beasts of the desert shall also ( n ) meet with the wild beasts of the isle, and the satyr shall cry to his fellow; the screech owl also shal...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:15 There ( o ) shall the great owl make her nest, and lay, and hatch, and gather under her shadow: there shall the vultures also be gathered, every one w...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:16 Seek ye out of the ( p ) book of the LORD, and read: no one of ( q ) these shall fail, none shall lack her mate: for my ( r ) mouth it hath commanded,...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 34:17 And he hath cast the ( s ) lot for them, and his hand hath divided it to them by line: they shall possess it for ever, from generation to generation s...
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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; Isa 34:9-17
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...
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MHCC: Isa 34:9-17 - --Those who aim to ruin the church, can never do that, but will ruin themselves. What dismal changes sin can make! It turns a fruitful land into barrenn...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 34:1-8; Isa 34:9-17
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...
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Matthew Henry: Isa 34:9-17 - -- This prophecy looks very black, but surely it looks so further than upon Edom and Bozrah. 1. It describes the melancholy changes that are often made...
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 34:5-7 - --
If we bear this in mind, we shall not be surprised that the prophet gives the following reason for the passing away of the present heavens. "For my...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 34:8-10 - --
Thus does Jehovah avenge His church upon Edom. "For Jehovah hath a day of vengeance, a year of recompense, to contend for Zion. And the brooks of E...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 34:11-12 - --
The land of Edom, in this geographical and also emblematical sense, would become a wilderness; the kingdom of Edom would be for ever destroyed. "An...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 34:13-15 - --
The allusion to the monarchy and the lofty electoral dignity leads the prophet on to the palaces and castles of the land. Starting with these, he ca...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 34:16-17 - --
Whenever any one compared the prophecy with the fulfilment, they would be found to coincide. "Search in the book of Jehovah, and read! Not one of t...
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 34:1--35:10 - --4. The consequences of Israel's trust chs. 34-35
This section concludes the major section of Isa...
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