
Text -- Isaiah 40:2 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The time of her captivity, and misery.

Wesley: Isa 40:2 - -- Not twice as much as her sins deserved, but abundantly enough to answer God's design in this chastisement, which was to humble and reform them, and to...
Not twice as much as her sins deserved, but abundantly enough to answer God's design in this chastisement, which was to humble and reform them, and to warn others by their example.
Literally, "to the heart"; not merely to the intellect.

JFB: Isa 40:2 - -- Jerusalem though then in ruins, regarded by God as about to be rebuilt; her people are chiefly meant, but the city is personified.
Jerusalem though then in ruins, regarded by God as about to be rebuilt; her people are chiefly meant, but the city is personified.

JFB: Isa 40:2 - -- Or, the appointed time of her misery (Job 7:1, Margin; Job 14:14; Dan 10:1). The ulterior and Messianic reference probably is the definite time when t...

JFB: Isa 40:2 - -- The Hebrew expresses that her iniquity is so expiated that God now delights in restoring her.
The Hebrew expresses that her iniquity is so expiated that God now delights in restoring her.

JFB: Isa 40:2 - -- This can only, in a very restricted sense, hold good of Judah's restoration after the first captivity. For how can it be said her "warfare was accompl...
This can only, in a very restricted sense, hold good of Judah's restoration after the first captivity. For how can it be said her "warfare was accomplished," when as yet the galling yoke of Antiochus and also of Rome was before them? The "double for her sins" must refer to the twofold captivity, the Assyrian and the Roman; at the coming close of this latter dispersion, and then only, can her "iniquity" be said to be "pardoned," or fully expiated [HOUBIGANT]. It does not mean double as much as she deserved, but ample punishment in her twofold captivity. Messiah is the antitypical Israel (compare Mat 2:15, with Hos 11:1). He indeed has "received" of sufferings amply more than enough to expiate "for our sins" (Rom 5:15, Rom 5:17). Otherwise (cry unto her) "that she shall receive (blessings) of the Lord's hand double to the punishment of all her sins" (so "sin" is used, Zec 14:19, Margin) [LOWTH]. The English Version is simpler.
Clarke -> Isa 40:2
Clarke: Isa 40:2 - -- Double for all her sins "Blessings double to the punishment"- It does not seem reconcilable to our notions of the Divine justice, which always punis...
Double for all her sins "Blessings double to the punishment"- It does not seem reconcilable to our notions of the Divine justice, which always punishes less than our iniquities deserve, to suppose that God had punished the sins of the Jews in double proportion; and it is more agreeable to the tenor of this consolatory message to understand it as a promise of ample recompense for the effects of past displeasure, on the reconciliation of God to his returning people. To express this sense of the passage, which the words of the original will very well bear, it was necessary to add a word or two in the version to supply the elliptical expression of the Hebrew. Compare Isa 61:7; Job 42:10; Zec 9:12.
Calvin -> Isa 40:2
Calvin: Isa 40:2 - -- 2.Speak ye according to the heart of Jerusalem Here God commands his servants the prophets, and lays down the message which he wishes them to deliver...
2.Speak ye according to the heart of Jerusalem Here God commands his servants the prophets, and lays down the message which he wishes them to deliver publicly, when believers shall be called to change their strain from mourning to joy. And yet he does not exhort and encourage them to the cheerful and courageous discharge of their office, so much as he conveys to the minds of believers an assured hope that they may patiently endure the irksomeness of delay, till the prophets appear with this glad and delightful message. To speak to the heart 107 is nothing else than “to speak according to the wish or sentiment of the mind;” for our heart abhors or recoils if any sad intelligence is communicated, but eagerly receives, or rather runs to meet, whatever is agreeable. Now, in consequence of the people having been apparently rejected, nothing could be more agreeable than a reconciliation 108 which should blot out all offenses. By a figure of speech in which a part is taken for the whole, Jerusalem, as is well known, denotes the Church.
And cry to her The word cry means that the promise of this grace will be open and manifest, so as to resound in the ears of all and be understood; for if prophets only muttered or spoke indistinctly, the belief of this consolation would be doubtful or weak, but now that they publish it boldly and with open mouth, all doubts are removed.
That her warfare is accomplished This is the desirable message, that the Lord determines to put an end to the warfare of his people. I consider
That her iniquity is pardoned This means that God is so gracious to them that he is unwilling to treat them with the utmost severity. These words, therefore, assign a reason; for, as physicians, in curing diseases, first remove the causes from which diseases arise, so does the Lord deal with us. The scourges by which he chastises us proceed from our sins; and therefore, that he may cease to strike, he must first pardon us; and consequently, he says that there will be an end of punishments, because he no longer imputes sin. Others think that
Double for all her sins This passage is explained in two ways. Some say that the people, having deserved a double punishment, have obtained a double favor; and others, that they have received enough of punishment, because God is unwilling to exact more. The former interpretation, though it contains an excellent and profitable doctrine, does not agree with the text, and must therefore be set aside; and it is evident that the Prophet means nothing else than that God is abundantly satisfied with the miseries which have befallen his Church. I could have wished, therefore, that they who have attacked Jerome and other supporters of this interpretation, had been more moderate; for the natural meaning belongs to this interpretation, and not to the more ingenious one, that the Lord repays double favor for their sins. The general meaning is, that God is unwilling to inflict more severe or more lengthened punishment on his people, because, through his fatherly kindness, he is in some sense displeased with the severity.
Here the word double denotes “large and abundant.” It must not be imagined that the punishments were greater than the offenses, or equal to them; for we ought to abhor the blasphemy of those who accuse God of cruelty, as if he inflicted on men excessively severe punishment; for what punishment could be inflicted that was sufficiently severe even for the smallest offense? This must therefore relate to the mercy of God, who, by setting a limit to the chastisements, testifies that he is unwilling to punish them any more or longer, as if he were abundantly satisfied with what had gone before, though that nation deserved far severer chastisements. God sustains the character of a Father who, while he compassionates his children, is led, not without reluctance, to exercise severity, and thus willingly bends his mind to grant forgiveness.
TSK -> Isa 40:2
TSK: Isa 40:2 - -- comfortably : Heb. to the heart, Gen 34:3; 2Ch 30:22; Hos 2:14 *marg.
warfare : or, appointed time, Psa. 102:13-28; Son 2:11-13; Jer 29:11; Dan 9:2, D...
comfortably : Heb. to the heart, Gen 34:3; 2Ch 30:22; Hos 2:14 *marg.
warfare : or, appointed time, Psa. 102:13-28; Son 2:11-13; Jer 29:11; Dan 9:2, Dan 9:24-27, Dan 11:35, Dan 12:4, Dan 12:9; Hab 2:3; Act 1:7; Gal 4:4; Rev 6:10,Rev 6:11, Rev 11:15-18
that her iniquity : Isa 12:1, Isa 33:24, Isa 43:25, Isa 44:22, Isa 61:7; Psa 32:1; Jer 31:33, Jer 31:34, Jer 33:8, Jer 33:9; 1Co 6:9-11
double : Isa 61:7; Job 42:10-12; Jer 16:18, Jer 17:18; Dan 9:12; Zec 1:15, Zec 9:12; Rev 18:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 40:2
Barnes: Isa 40:2 - -- Speak ye comfortably - Hebrew, על־לב ‛al - lēb as in the margin, ‘ To the heart.’ The heart is the seat of the aff...
Speak ye comfortably - Hebrew,
To Jerusalem - The direction is not merely to speak to the people in Babylon, but also to comfort Jerusalem itself lying in ruins. The general direction is, therefore, that the entire series of topics of consolation should be adduced - the people were to return from their bondage, and Jerusalem was to be rebuilt, and the worship of God to be restored.
And cry unto her - In the manner of a crier; or one making public and loud proclamation (compare Isa 40:3, Isa 40:9). Jerusalem is here personified. She is addressed as in ruins, and as about to be rebuilt, and as capable of consolation from this promise.
That her warfare is accomplished - Septuagint, ‘ That her humiliation (
Is there not a set time (Hebrew, a warfare) to man upon earth?
Are not his days as the days of an hireling?
But if a man die - shall he indeed live again?
All the days of my appointed time (Hebrew, my warfare) will I wait,
Till my change come.
Compare Dan 10:1. The word then means hard service, such as soldiers endure; an appointed time which they are to serve; an enlistment involving hardships, toil, privation, danger, calamity. In this sense it is applied hero to Jerusalem - to the trials, calamities, desolations to which she was subjected for her sins, and which were to endure a definite and fixed time - like the enlistment of an army. That time was now coming to an end, and to be succeeded by a release, or discharge. Vitringa, who supposes that this refers primarily and solely to the times of the Messiah, regards this as meaning that the definite time of the legal economy, a time of toil, and of vexatious and troublesome ceremonies, was about to end by the coming of the Messiah. But the more correct interpretation is, probably, that which supposes that there was a primary reference to the long and painful captivity of the Jews, in Babylon.
That her iniquity - The iniquity or sin here referred to, is that long series of acts of rebellion, corruption, and idolatry, with which the Jewish people had been chargeable, and which had rendered their captivity necessary. As a nation, that sin was now expiated, or removed by their protracted punishment in Babylon. It was a sufficient expression of the divine displeasure at the national offences, and God was satisfied (
Is pardoned - Vulgate, Dimissa est iniquitas illius . Septuagint,
For she hath received - Jerusalem had now been desolate for almost seventy years, on the supposition that this relates to the period near the close of the exile, and that was regarded as an ample or full expression of what she ought to suffer for her national offences.
Of the Lord’ s hand - From the hand, or by the agency of Yahweh. Whoever were the instruments, her sufferings were to be regarded as his appointment.
Double for all her sins - The word rendered ‘ double’ (
Who will rip up the covering of his armor?
Against the doubling of his nostrils who will advance?
Good
And in Job 11:6 :
And that he would unfold to them the secrets of wisdom.
That they are double to that which is;
That is, there are double-folds to God’ s wisdom, or the wisdom of of God is complicated, inexplicabIe (Gesenius). The word in Job means ‘ conduplications, folds, complications, mazes, intricacies’ (Good). Here the word has doubtless its usual and proper meaning, and denotes double, twice as much; and the expression may denote that God had inflicted on them double that which had been usually inflicted on rebellious nations, or on the nation, before for its sins. Or the word may be used to denote abundance, and the prophet may design to teach that they had been amply, or abundantly punished for their crimes. ‘ That is,’ says Grotius, ‘ as much as God judged to be sufficient.’ ‘ Double, here,’ says Calvin, ‘ is to be received for large and abundant.’ Some have supposed (see Rosenmuller, who approves of this interpretation) that the word ‘ sins here means the punishment of sins, and that the word ‘ double’ refers to the mercies or favors which they were about to receive, or which God had purposed to confer on them. So Lowth understands it; and renders the word
That she shall receive at the hand of Yahweh
(Blessings) double to the punishment of all her sins.
But though it was true that their favors on their return, in the hope of the Messiah, and in their renovated privileges, would be far more numerous than their sufferings had been, yet this does not so well suit the connection, where the prophet is giving a reason why they should be released from their bondage, and restored to the privileges of their own land. That reason manifestly is, that they had suffered what was regarded by Yahweh as an ample expression of his displeasure for their national offences. It does not refer to individual sinners; nor to any power which they have to make atonement for their sins; nor does it refer to the atonement made by the Messiah. But it may be remarked, by the way, that in the sufferings of the Redeemer there has been ample satisfaction for the sins of his people. The Chaldee interpreter understands this as Rosenmuller does, that the word ‘ double’ refers to, the mercies which they had received: ‘ Because she has received a cup of consolation from the presence of the Lord, as if (
Poole -> Isa 40:2
Poole: Isa 40:2 - -- Cry unto her proclaim it in my name.
Her warfare the time of her servitude, and captivity, and misery.
Her iniquity is pardoned I am reconciled t...
Cry unto her proclaim it in my name.
Her warfare the time of her servitude, and captivity, and misery.
Her iniquity is pardoned I am reconciled to her; I will not impute sin to her, to punish her any longer for it.
Double for all her sins not twice as much as her sins deserved, for she herself confessed the contrary, Ezr 9:13 Lam 3:22 ; but abundantly enough to answer God’ s design in this chastisement, which was to humble and reform them, and to warn others by their example. Double is oft put for abundantly, as Isa 61:7 Jer 16:18 17:18 . God here speaks of himself after the manner of men, and compareth himself to a tender-hearted father, who when he hath corrected his child for his misdemeanour, relenteth and repenteth of his severity, and casteth his rod away.
Haydock -> Isa 40:2
Haydock: Isa 40:2 - -- Evil. Hebrew and some Latin copies have, "warfare." ---
Double. A rigorous chastisement, Apocalypse xviii. 6. (Calmet)
Evil. Hebrew and some Latin copies have, "warfare." ---
Double. A rigorous chastisement, Apocalypse xviii. 6. (Calmet)
Gill -> Isa 40:2
Gill: Isa 40:2 - -- Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her,.... Or, "speak to or according to the heart of Jerusalem h"; to her very heart, what will be a co...
Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her,.... Or, "speak to or according to the heart of Jerusalem h"; to her very heart, what will be a cordial to her, very acceptable, grateful, and comfortable; and let it be proclaimed aloud, that she may hear and understand it. By "Jerusalem" is meant the Gospel church, and the true members of it. Aben Ezra interprets it of the congregation of Israel; see Heb 12:22,
that her warfare is accomplished; this life is a warfare; saints have many enemies to engage with, sin, Satan, and the world; many battles to fight, a great fight of afflictions, and the good fight of faith: this is "accomplished", or "filled up i"; not that it is at an end before this life is, while that lasts there will be a continual conflict; yet all enemies are now conquered by Christ, and in a short time will be under the feet of his people; the Captain of their salvation, who has got the victory, is gone before them; the crown is laid up for them, and is sure unto them. Some interpret it, as Aben Ezra, Kimchi, and Ben Melech, "her set or appointed time k"; and compare it with Job 7:1, and may be understood either of the time of deliverance from captivity: so the Targum,
"that her captivity by the people is filled up:''
or of the time of the Messiah's coming, the fulness of time, when he should appear, afterwards prophesied of; or of the servitude and bondage of the law being at an end, and of all the fatigue, labour, and trouble of that dispensation; and of the Gospel dispensation taking place: it follows,
that her iniquity is pardoned; which is God's act, flows from his free grace, is obtained by the blood of Christ, is full and complete, and yields great relief and comfort to guilty minds: or "is accepted" l; that is, the punishment of it as bore by her surety; see Lev 26:43. The allusion is to the sacrifices being accepted for the atonement of sin, Lev 1:4, and may have respect here to the acceptation of Christ's sacrifice, for the expiation of the sins of his people. Jarchi interprets the word "appeased"; and so it may be applied to the reconciliation for sin made by the blood of Christ. The Targum understands it of forgiveness, as we do:
for she hath received of the Lord's hand double for all her sins; which may be understood either of a sufficiency of chastisements for sin; though they are not more, but less, than are deserved, yet are as much as their heavenly Father, in his great tenderness and compassion, thinks are enough; and though they are in measure, and do not exceed, yet are in large measure often, at least in their own apprehension: or else of the large and copious blessings of grace and goodness received, instead of punishment for sins, that might be expected: or rather at the complete satisfaction made by Christ for her sins, and of her receiving at the Lord's hands, in her surety, full punishment for them; not that more was required than was due, but that ample satisfaction was made, and, being infinite, fully answers the demerit of sin; and this being in the room and stead of God's people, clears them, and yields comfort to them.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 40:2 Heb “for she has received from the hand of the Lord double.” The principle of the double portion in punishment is also seen in Jer 16:18; ...
Geneva Bible -> Isa 40:2
Geneva Bible: Isa 40:2 Speak ye kindly to Jerusalem, and cry to her, that her ( b ) warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received from the LO...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 40:1-31
TSK Synopsis: Isa 40:1-31 - --1 The promulgation of the Gospel.3 The preaching of John Baptist.9 The preaching of the apostles.12 The prophet, by the omnipotency of God,18 and his ...
Maclaren -> Isa 40:1-10
Maclaren: Isa 40:1-10 - --Great Voices From Heaven
Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your God. 2. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare i...
MHCC -> Isa 40:1-11
MHCC: Isa 40:1-11 - --All human life is a warfare; the Christian life is the most so; but the struggle will not last always. Troubles are removed in love, when sin is pardo...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 40:1-2
Matthew Henry: Isa 40:1-2 - -- We have here the commission and instructions given, not to this prophet only, but, with him, to all the Lord's prophets, nay, and to all Christ's mi...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 40:2
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 40:2 - --
The summons is now repeated with still greater emphasis, the substance of the consoling proclamation being also given. "Speak ye to the heart of Je...
Constable: Isa 40:1--55:13 - --IV. Israel's calling in the world chs. 40--55
This part of Isaiah picks up a theme from chapters 1-39 and develo...

Constable: Isa 40:1--48:22 - --A. God's grace to Israel chs. 40-48
These chapters particularly address the questions of whether God cou...

Constable: Isa 40:1-31 - --1. The Lord of the servant ch. 40
Would the coming Babylonian exile prove that God could not del...
