
Text -- Isaiah 5:1-3 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Isa 5:1 - -- I will record it to he a witness for God, and against you, as Moses did his song, Deu 31:19, Deu 32:1.

Not devised by me, but inspired by God.

Hills being places most commodious for vines.

He removed all hindrances, and gave them all the means of fruitfulness.
JFB: Isa 5:1 - -- Rather, "concerning" [GESENIUS], that is, in the person of My beloved, as His representative [VITRINGA]. Isaiah gives a hint of the distinction and ye...
Rather, "concerning" [GESENIUS], that is, in the person of My beloved, as His representative [VITRINGA]. Isaiah gives a hint of the distinction and yet unity of the Divine Persons (compare He with I, Isa 5:2-3).

JFB: Isa 5:1 - -- Inspired by Him; or else, a tender song [CASTALIO]. By a slight change of reading "a song of His love" [HOUBIGANT]. "The Beloved" is Jehovah, the Seco...
Inspired by Him; or else, a tender song [CASTALIO]. By a slight change of reading "a song of His love" [HOUBIGANT]. "The Beloved" is Jehovah, the Second Person, the "Angel" of God the Father, not in His character as incarnate Messiah, but as God of the Jews (Exo 23:20-21; Exo 32:34; Exo 33:14).

JFB: Isa 5:1 - -- (Isa 3:14; Psa 80:8, &c.). The Jewish covenant-people, separated from the nations for His glory, as the object of His peculiar care (Mat 20:1; Mat 21...

JFB: Isa 5:1 - -- Literally, "a horn" ("peak," as the Swiss shreckhorn) of the son of oil; poetically, for very fruitful. Suggestive of isolation, security, and a sunny...
Literally, "a horn" ("peak," as the Swiss shreckhorn) of the son of oil; poetically, for very fruitful. Suggestive of isolation, security, and a sunny aspect. Isaiah alludes plainly to the Song of Solomon (Son 6:3; Son 8:11-12), in the words "His vineyard" and "my Beloved" (compare Isa 26:20; Isa 61:10, with Son 1:4; Son 4:10). The transition from "branch" (Isa 4:2) to "vineyard" here is not unnatural.

JFB: Isa 5:2 - -- Rather, "digged and trenched" the ground to prepare it for planting the vines [MAURER].
Rather, "digged and trenched" the ground to prepare it for planting the vines [MAURER].

JFB: Isa 5:2 - -- Hebrew, sorek; called still in Morocco, serki; the grapes had scarcely perceptible seeds; the Persian kishmish or bedana, that is, "without seed" (Gen...
Hebrew, sorek; called still in Morocco, serki; the grapes had scarcely perceptible seeds; the Persian kishmish or bedana, that is, "without seed" (Gen 49:11).

JFB: Isa 5:2 - -- To watch the vineyard against the depredations of man or beast, and for the use of the owner (Mat 21:33).
To watch the vineyard against the depredations of man or beast, and for the use of the owner (Mat 21:33).

JFB: Isa 5:2 - -- Including the wine-fat; both hewn, for coolness, out of the rocky undersoil of the vineyard.
Including the wine-fat; both hewn, for coolness, out of the rocky undersoil of the vineyard.

JFB: Isa 5:2 - -- The Hebrew expresses offensive putrefaction, answering to the corrupt state of the Jews. Fetid fruit of the wild vine [MAURER], instead of "choicest" ...
The Hebrew expresses offensive putrefaction, answering to the corrupt state of the Jews. Fetid fruit of the wild vine [MAURER], instead of "choicest" grapes. Of the poisonous monk's hood [GESENIUS]. The Arabs call the fruit of the nightshade "wolf grapes" (Deu 32:32-33; 2Ki 4:39-41). JEROME tries to specify the details of the parable; the "fence," angels; the "stones gathered out," idols; the "tower," the "temple in the midst" of Judea; the "wine-press," the altar.

JFB: Isa 5:3 - -- Appeal of God to themselves, as in Isa 1:18; Mic 6:3. So Jesus Christ, in Mat 21:40-41, alluding in the very form of expression to this, makes them pa...
Clarke: Isa 5:1 - -- Now will I sing to my well-beloved a song of my beloved "Let me sing now a song,"etc. - A MS., respectable for its antiquity, adds the word שיר ...
Now will I sing to my well-beloved a song of my beloved "Let me sing now a song,"etc. - A MS., respectable for its antiquity, adds the word
A song of my beloved "A song of loves"-
In a very fruitful hill "On a high and fruitful hill"- Hebrew
" Hanc latus angustum jam se cogentis in arctu
Hesperiae tenuem producit in aequora linguam
Adriacas flexis claudit quae cornibus undas .
Lucan, 2:612, of Brundusium, i.e.,
Here the precise idea seems to be that of a high mountain standing by itself; " vertex montis, aut pars montis ad aliis divisa ;"which signification, says I. H. Michaelis, Bibl. Hallens., Not. in loc., the word has in Arabic
Judea was in general a mountainous country, whence Moses sometimes calls it The Mountain, "Thou shalt plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance;"Exo 15:17. "I pray thee, let me go over, and see the good land beyond Jordan; that goodly mountain, and Lebanon;"Deu 3:25. And in a political and religious view it was detached and separated from all the nations round it. Whoever has considered the descriptions given of Mount Tabor, (see Reland, Palaestin.; Eugene Roger, Terre Sainte, p. 64), and the views of it which are to be seen in books of travels, (Maundrell, p. 114; Egmont and Heyman, vol. ii., p. 25; Thevenot, vol. i., p. 429), its regular conic form rising singly in a plain to a great height, from a base small in proportion, and its beauty and fertility to the very top, will have a good idea of "a horn the son of oil;"and will perhaps be induced to think that the prophet took his image from that mountain.

Clarke: Isa 5:2 - -- And gathered out the stones "And he cleared it from the stones"- This was agreeable to the husbandry: " Saxa, summa parte terrae, et vites et arbore...
And gathered out the stones "And he cleared it from the stones"- This was agreeable to the husbandry: " Saxa, summa parte terrae, et vites et arbores laeduct; ima parte refrigerant ;"Columell. de arb. 3: " Saxosum facile est expedire lectione lapidum ;"Id. 2:2. " Lapides, qui supersunt, [al. insuper sunt], hieme rigent, aestate fervescunt; idcirco satis, arbustis, et vitibus nocent ;"Pallad. 1:6. A piece of ground thus cleared of the stones Persius, in his hard way of metaphor, calls " exossatus ager ,"an unboned field; Sat. 6:52
The choicest vine "Sorek"- Many of the ancient interpreters, the Septuagint, Aquila, and Theod., have retained this word as a proper name; I think very rightly. Sorek was a valley lying between Ascalon and Gaza, and running far up eastward in the tribe of Judah. Both Ascalon and Gaza were anciently famous for wine; the former is mentioned as such by Alexander Trallianus; the latter by several authors, quoted by Reland, Palaest., p. 589 and 986. And it seems that the upper part of the valley of Sorek, and that of Eshcol, where the spies gathered the single cluster of grapes, which they were obliged to bear between two upon a staff, being both near to Hebron were in the same neighborhood, and that all this part of the country abounded with rich vineyards. Compare Num 13:22, Num 13:23; Jdg 16:3, Jdg 16:4. P. Nau supposes Eshcol and Sorek to be only different names for the same valley. Voyage Noveau de la Terre Sainte, lib. iv., chap. 18. See likewise De Lisle’ s posthumous map of the Holy Land. Paris, 1763. See Bochart, Hieroz. ii., Colossians 725. Thevenot, i, p. 406. Michaelis (note on Jdg 16:4 (note), German translation) thinks it probable, from some circumstances of the history there given, that Sorek was in the tribe of Judah, not in the country of the Philistines
The vine of Sorek was known to the Israelites, being mentioned by Moses, Gen 49:11, before their coming out of Egypt. Egypt was not a wine country. "Throughout this country there are no wines;"Sandys, p. 101. At least in very ancient times they had none. Herodotus, 2:77, says it had no vines and therefore used an artificial wine made of barley. That is not strictly true, for the vines of Egypt are spoken of in Scripture, Psa 78:47; Psa 105:33; and see Gen 40:11, by which it should seem that they drank only the fresh juice pressed from the grape, which was called
"Binding his foal to the vine
And his ass’ s colt to his own sorek
He washeth his raiment in wine
And his cloak in the blood of grapes.
I take the liberty of rendering
And built a tower in the midst of it - Our Savior, who has taken the general idea of one of his parables, Mat 21:33; Mar 12:1, from this of Isaiah, has likewise inserted this circumstance of building a tower; which is generally explained by commentators as designed for the keeper of the vineyard to watch and defend the fruits. But for this purpose it was usual to make a little temporary hut, (Isa 1:8), which might serve for the short season while the fruit was ripening, and which was removed afterwards. The tower therefore should rather mean a building of a more permanent nature and use; the farm, as we may call it, of the vineyard, containing all the offices and implements, and the whole apparatus necessary for the culture of the vineyard, and the making of the wine. To which image in the allegory, the situation the manner of building, the use, and the whole service of the temple, exactly answered. And so the Chaldee paraphrast very rightly expounds it: Et statui eos (Israelitas) ut plantam vineae selectae et aedificavi Sanctuarium meum in medio illorum . "And I have appointed the Israelites as a plant of a chosen vine, and I have built my sanctuary in the midst of them."So also Hieron. in loc. Aedificavit quoque turrim in medio ejus; templum videlicet in media civitate . "He built also a tower in the midst of it, viz., his own temple in the midst of the city."That they have still such towers or buildings for use or pleasure, in their gardens in the East, see Harmer’ s Observations, 2 p. 241
And also made a wine-press therein. "And hewed out a lake therein"- This image also our Savior has preserved in his parable.
Nonnus describes at large Bacchus hollowing the inside of a rock, and hewing out a place for the wine-press, or rather the lake: -
Θηγαλεῃ γλωχινι μυχον κοιληνατο πετρης
Λειηνας δε μετωπα βαθυνομενων κενεωνω
Dionysiac. lib. xii., 50:331
"He pierced the rock; and with the sharpen’ d too
Of steel well-temper’ d scoop’ d its inmost depth
Then smooth’ d the front, and form’ d the dark reces
In just dimensions for the foaming lake.
And he looked "And he expected"- Jeremiah, Jer 2:21, uses the same image, and applies it to the same purpose, in an elegant paraphrase of this part of Isaiah’ s parable, in his flowing and plaintive manner: -
"But I planted thee a sorek, a scion perfectly genuine: How then art thou changed, and become to me the degenerate shoots of the strange vine!
Wild grapes "poisonous berries"-
From some such sorts of poisonous fruits of the grape kind Moses has taken these strong and highly poetical images, with which he has set forth the future corruption and extreme degeneracy of the Israelites, in an allegory which has a near relation, both in its subject and imagery, to this of Isaiah: Deu 32:32, Deu 32:33
"Their vine is from the vine of Sodom
And from the fields of Gomorrah
Their grapes are grapes of gall
Their clusters are bitter
Their wine is the poison of dragons
And the cruel venom of aspics.
"I am inclined to believe,"says Hasselquist, "that the prophet here, Isa 5:2-4, means the hoary nightshade, solanum incanum ; because it is common in Egypt, Palestine, and the East; and the Arabian name agrees well with it. The Arabs call it

Clarke: Isa 5:3 - -- Inhabitants - ישבי yoshebey , in the plural number; three MSS., (two ancient), and so likewise the Septuagint and Vulgate.
Inhabitants -
Calvin: Isa 5:1 - -- 1.Now will I sing to my beloved The subject of this chapter is different from that of the former. It was the design of the Prophet to describe the co...
1.Now will I sing to my beloved The subject of this chapter is different from that of the former. It was the design of the Prophet to describe the condition of the people of Israel, as it then was, in order that all might perceive their faults, and might thus be led by shame and self-loathing to sincere repentance. Here, as in a mirror, the people might behold the misery of their condition. But for this, they would have flattered themselves too much in their crimes, and would not have patiently listened to any instructions. It was therefore necessary to present a striking and lively picture of their wickedness; and in order that it might have the greater weight, he made use of this preface; for great and memorable events were usually described in verse, that they might be repeated by every one, and that a lasting record of them might be preserved. In like manner, we see that Moses wrote a song, and many other compositions, (Exo 15:1; Deu 32:1,) in order that all the events might be proclaimed in this manner, both in public and in private. The instruction becomes more widely diffused than if it had been delivered in plainer language. For the same reason Isaiah composed this song, that he might present to the people a clearer view of their wickedness; and, undoubtedly, he handled this subject with magnificent and harmonious language, for the highest skill is commonly exercised in the composition of poems.
To my beloved There can be no doubt that he means God; as if he had said that he would compose a poem in behalf of God, that he might expostulate with the people about their ingratitude; for it gave additional weight to his language to represent God as speaking. But a question arises, Why does Isaiah call God his friend? Some reply that he was a kinsman of Christ, and I acknowledge that he was a descendant of David; but this appears to be a forced interpretation. A more natural and appropriate one would be, to adopt the statement of John, that the Church is committed to the friends of the bridegroom, (Joh 3:29,) and to reckon prophets as belonging to that class. To them, unquestionably, this designation applies; for the ancient people were placed under their charge, that they might be kept under their leader. We need not wonder, therefore, that they were jealous and were greatly offended when the people bestowed their attachment on any other. Isaiah therefore assumes the character of the bridegroom, and, being deeply anxious about the bride entrusted to him, complains that she has broken conjugal fidelity, and deplores her treachery and ingratitude.
Hence we learn that not only Paul, but all those prophets and teachers who faithfully served God, were jealous of God’s spouse. (2Co 11:2.) And all the servants of God ought to be greatly moved and aroused by this appellation; for what does a man reckon more valuable than his wife? A well-disposed husband will value her more highly than all his treasures, and will more readily commit to any person the charge of his wealth than of his wife. He to whom one will entrust his dearly-beloved wife must be reckoned very faithful. Now to pastors and ministers the Lord commits his Church as his beloved wife. How great will be our wickedness if we betray her by sloth and negligence! Whosoever does not labor earnestly to preserve her can on no pretense be excused.
A song of my beloved By using the word
My beloved had a vineyard The metaphor of a vineyard is frequently employed by the prophets, and it would be impossible to find a more appropriate comparison. (Psa 80:8; Jer 2:21.) There are two ways in which it points out how highly the Lord values his Church; for no possession is dearer to a man than a vineyard, and there is none that demands more constant and persevering toil. Not only, therefore, does the Lord declare that we are his beloved inheritance, but at the same time points out his care and anxiety about us.
In this song the Prophet mentions, first, the benefits which the Lord had bestowed on the Jewish people; secondly, he explains how great was the ingratitude of the people; thirdly, the punishment which must follow; fourthly, he enumerates the vices of the people; for men never acknowledge their vices till they are compelled to do so.
On a hill He begins by saying that God had placed his people in a favorable situation, as when a person plants a vine on a pleasant and fertile hill. By the word horn or hill I understand a lofty place rising above a plain, or what we commonly call a rising-ground, ( un coustau .) It is supposed by some to refer to the situation of Jerusalem, but I consider this to be unnatural and forced. It rather belongs to the construction of the Prophet’s allegory; and as God was pleased to take this people under his care and protection, he compares this favor to the planting of a vineyard; for it is better to plant vines on hills and lofty places than on a plain. In like manner the poet says, The vine loves the open hills; the yews prefer the north wind and the cold 75 The Prophet, therefore, having alluded to the ordinary method of planting the vine, next follows out the comparison, that this place occupied no ordinary situation. When he calls it the son of oil or of fatness, 76 he means a rich and exceedingly fertile spot. This is limited by some commentators to the fertility of Judea, but that does not accord with my views, for the Prophet intended to describe metaphorically the prosperous condition of the people.

Calvin: Isa 5:2 - -- 2.And he fenced it The incessant care and watchfulness of God in dressing his vine are asserted by the Prophet, as if he had said, that God has negle...
2.And he fenced it The incessant care and watchfulness of God in dressing his vine are asserted by the Prophet, as if he had said, that God has neglected nothing that could be expected from the best and most careful householder. And yet we do not choose to attempt, as some commentators have done, an ingenious exposition of every clause, such as, that the Church is fenced by the protection of the Holy Spirit, so that it is safe against the attacks of the devil; that the wine-press is doctrine; and that by the stones are meant the annoyances of errors. The design of the Prophet, as I have mentioned, was more obvious, namely, that by incessant care and large expenditure God has performed the part of an excellent husbandman. Yet it was the duty of the Jews to consider how numerous and diversified were the blessings which God had conferred on them; and at the present day, when the Church is represented under the metaphor of a vineyard, we ought to view those figures as denoting God’s blessings, by which he makes known not only his love toward us, but likewise his solicitude about our salvation.
In the verb planted the order appears to be reversed, for one ought to begin with planting rather than with the fence; but my explanation is, that after having planted, he did everything else that was necessary. Justly, therefore, does he charge them with ingratitude and treachery, when the fruits that ought to have followed such laborious cultivation were not brought forth. There is reason to fear that the Lord will bring the same accusation against us; for the greater the benefits which we have received from God, the more disgraceful will be our ingratitude if we abuse them. It is not without a good reason, or to enable them to make any idle display, that the Lord blesses his people; it is, that they may yield grapes, that is, the best fruit. If he be disappointed of his expectation, the punishment which the Prophet here describes will follow. The mention of his benefits ought, therefore, to produce a powerful impression on our minds, and to excite us to gratitude.
Besides, the word vineyard, and a vineyard so carefully cultivated, suggests an implied contrast; for so much the more highly ought we to value the acts of God’s kindness, when they are not of an ordinary description, but tokens of his peculiar regard. Other blessings are indiscriminately bestowed, such as, that he
maketh the sun to shine on the evil as well as on the good, (Mat 5:45,)
and supplies them with what is necessary for food and clothing. But how much more highly ought we to esteem that covenant of grace into which he has entered with us, by which he makes the light of the Gospel to shine on us; for his own people are its peculiar objects! That care and diligence, therefore, which the Lord continually manifests in cultivating our minds deserves our most earnest consideration.
Therefore he hoped that it would bring forth grapes 77 He now complains that the nation which had enjoyed such high advantages had basely and shamefully degenerated; and he accuses them of undervaluing the kindness of God, for he says that, instead of pleasant grapes, they yielded only wild and bitter fruits. It is undoubtedly true that God, to whose eyes all things are naked and opened, (Heb 4:13,) is not deceived by his expectation like a mortal man. In the Song of Moses he plainly declares that he well knew from the beginning what would be the wickedness of his people.
My beloved, says he, when she fares well and becomes fat,
will kick. (Deu 32:15.)
It is therefore not more possible that God should be mistaken in his expectations, than that he should repent. Isaiah does not here enter into subtle reasonings about the expectations which God had formed, but describes the manner in which the people ought to have acted, that they might not lose the benefit of such excellent advantages. Thus God commands that the Gospel be proclaimed for the obedience of faith, (Rom 16:26,) not that he expects all to be obedient, but because, by the mere hearing of it, unbelievers are rendered inexcusable. Moreover, there is nothing that ought to excite us more powerfully to lead a devout and holy life, than to find that those duties which we perform towards God are compared by the Holy Spirit to fruits of exquisite flavour.

Calvin: Isa 5:3 - -- 3.Now, therefore, O inhabitant of Jerusalem! Those persons with whom he contends are made judges in their own cause, as is usually done in cases so p...
3.Now, therefore, O inhabitant of Jerusalem! Those persons with whom he contends are made judges in their own cause, as is usually done in cases so plain and undoubted that the opposite party has no means of evasion. It is, therefore, a proof of the strongest confidence in his cause, when he bids the guilty persons themselves declare if this be not the true state of the fact; for immediately afterwards we shall find him declaring that the accusation is decided against those persons to whom he now commits the decision.
Defender -> Isa 5:1
Defender: Isa 5:1 - -- The "vineyard" in this song represents Israel (Isa 5:7), a figure which was later appropriated by Christ (Mat 21:33-45). The "pleasant plant" (Isa 5:7...
The "vineyard" in this song represents Israel (Isa 5:7), a figure which was later appropriated by Christ (Mat 21:33-45). The "pleasant plant" (Isa 5:7) in the vineyard, which represents Judah, is probably the "fig tree planted in his vineyard" (Luk 13:6). Sadly, however, the vineyard produced wild grapes and the fig tree was barren, so God eventually had to "lay it waste" (Isa 5:6)."
TSK: Isa 5:1 - -- Now : Deu 31:19-22; Judg. 5:1-31; Psa 45:1, Psa 101:1
wellbeloved : Son 2:16, Son 5:2, Son 5:16, Son 6:3
touching : Isa 27:2, Isa 27:3; Psa 80:8; Son ...

TSK: Isa 5:2 - -- fenced it : or, made a wall about it, Exo 33:16; Num 23:9; Deu 32:8, Deu 32:9; Psa 44:1-3; Rom 9:4
planted : Jer 2:21
the choicest vine : Sorek in ...
fenced it : or, made a wall about it, Exo 33:16; Num 23:9; Deu 32:8, Deu 32:9; Psa 44:1-3; Rom 9:4
planted : Jer 2:21
the choicest vine :
made : Heb. hewed
a winepress : Isa 63:2, Isa 63:3; Neh 13:15; Rev 14:18-20
he looked : Isa 5:7, Isa 1:2-4, Isa 1:21-23; Deu 32:6; Mat 21:34; Mar 11:13, Mar 12:2; Luk 13:7, Luk 20:10-18; 1Co 9:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Isa 5:1 - -- Now will I sing - This is an indication that what follows is poetic, or is adapted to be sung or chanted. To my well-beloved - The word u...
Now will I sing - This is an indication that what follows is poetic, or is adapted to be sung or chanted.
To my well-beloved - The word used here -
A Song of my beloved - Lowth, ‘ A song of loves,’ by a slight change in the Hebrew. The word
Touching his vineyard - The Jewish people are often represented under the image of a vineyard, planted and cultivated by God; see Ps. 80; Jer 2:21; Jer 12:10. Our Saviour also used this beautiful figure to denote the care and attention which God had bestowed on his people; Mat 21:33 ff; Mar 12:1, following.
My beloved - God.
Hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill - Hebrew ‘ On a horn of the son of oil.’ The word "horn"used here in the Hebrew, denotes the "brow, apex,"or sharp point of a hill. The word is thus used in other languages to denote a hill, as in the Swiss words "shreckhorn, buchorn."Thus "Cornwall,"in England, is called in the old British tongue "Kernaw,"as lessening by degrees, like a horn, running out into promontories, like so many horns; for the Britons called a horn "corn,"and in the plural "kern."The term ‘ horn’ is not unfrequently applied to hills. Thus, Pococke tells us (vol. ii. p. 67), that there is a low mountain in Galilee which has both its ends raised in such a manner as to look like two mounts, which are called the ‘ Horns of Hutin.’ Harmer, however, supposes that the term is used here to denote the land of Syria, from its resemblance to the shape ofa horn; Obs. iii. 242. But the idea is, evidently, that the land on which God respresents himself as having planted his vineyard, was like an elevated hill that was adapted eminently to such a culture. It may mean either the "top"of a mountain, or a little mountain, or a "peak"divided from others. The most favorable places for vineyards were on the sides of hills, where they would be exposed to the sun. - Shaw’ s "Travels,"p. 338. Thus Virgil says:
- denique apertos
Bacchus amat colles .
‘ Bacchus loves open hills;’ "Georg."ii. 113. The phrase, "son of oil,"is used in accordance with the Jewish custom, where "son"means descendant, relative, etc.; see the note at Mat 1:1. Here it means that it was so fertile that it might be called the very "son of oil,"or fatness, that is, fertility. The image is poetic, and very beautiful; denoting that God had planted his people in circumstances where he had a right to expect great growth in attachment to him. It was not owing to any want of care on his part, that they were not distinguished for piety. The Chaldee renders this verse, ‘ The prophet said, I will sing now to Israel, who is compared to a vineyard, the seed of Abraham my beloved: a song of my beloved to his vineyard.’

Barnes: Isa 5:2 - -- And he fenced it - Margin, ‘ Made a wall about it.’ The word used here is supposed rather to mean "to dig about, to grub,"as with a ...
And he fenced it - Margin, ‘ Made a wall about it.’ The word used here is supposed rather to mean "to dig about, to grub,"as with a pick-axe or spade. - "Gesenius."It has this signification in Arabic, and in one place in the Jewish Talmud. - "Kimchi."The Vulgate and the Septuagint understands it of making a hedge or fence, probably the first work in preparing a vineyard. And as ‘ a hedge’ is expressly mentioned in Isa 5:5, it seems most probable that that is its meaning here.
And gathered out the stones ... - That it might be easily cultivated. This was, of course, a necessary and proper work.
And planted it with the choicest vine - Hebrew, ‘ With the sorek.’ This was a choice species of vine, the grapes of which, the Jewish commentators say, had very small and scarcely perceptible stones, and which, at this day, is called "serki"in Morocco; in Persia, "kishmis."- "Gesenius."
And built a tower - For the sake of watching and defending it. These towers were probably placed so as to overlook the whole vineyard, and were thus posts of observation; compare the note at Isa 1:8; see also the note at Mat 21:33.
And also made a wine-press - A place in which to put the grapes for the purpose of expressing the juice; see the note at Mat 21:33.
And he looked - He waited in expectation; as a farmer waits patiently for the vines to grow, and to bear grapes.
Wild grapes - The word used here is derived from the verb
The general meaning of this parable it is not difficult to understand; compare the notes at Mat 21:33. Jerome has attempted to follow out the allegory, and explain the particular parts. He says, ‘ By the metaphor of the vineyard is to be understood the people of the Jews, which he surrounded or enclosed by angels; by gathering out the stones, the removal of idols; by the tower, the temple erected in the midst of Judea; by the wine-press, the altar.’ There is no propriety, however, in attempting thus minutely to explain the particular parts of the figure. The general meaning is, that God had chosen the Jewish people; had bestowed great care on them in giving them his law, in defending them, and in providing for them; that he had omitted nothing that was adapted to produce piety, obedience, and happiness, and that they had abused it all, and instead of being obedient, had become exceedingly corrupt.

Barnes: Isa 5:3 - -- And now ... - This is an appeal which God makes to the Jews themselves, in regard to the justice and propriety of what he was about to do. A si...
And now ... - This is an appeal which God makes to the Jews themselves, in regard to the justice and propriety of what he was about to do. A similar appeal he makes in Mic 6:3 : ‘ O my people, what have I done unto thee? and wherein have I wearied thee? Testify against me.’ He intended to "punish"them Isa 5:5-6, and he appeals to them for the justice of it. He would do to them as they would do to a vineyard that had been carefully prepared and guarded, and which yet was valueless. A similar appeal he makes in Isa 1:18; and our Saviour made an application remarkably similar in his parable of the vineyard, Mat 21:40-43. It is not improbable that he had his eye on this very place in Isaiah; and it is, therefore, the more remarkable that the Jews did not understand the bearing of his discourse.
Poole: Isa 5:1 - -- Now will I sing I will record it, to be a witness for God, and against you, as Moses did his song, Deu 31:19 32:1 .
To my Well-beloved to the Lord...
Now will I sing I will record it, to be a witness for God, and against you, as Moses did his song, Deu 31:19 32:1 .
To my Well-beloved to the Lord of the vineyard, as appears by the last clause of the verse; to God or Christ, whom I love and serve, and for whose glory, eclipsed by you, I am greatly concerned.
A song of my Beloved not devised by me, not the effect of my envy or passion; but inspired by God, which therefore it behoveth you to lay to heart.
His vineyard his church, oft and very fitly called a vineyard , because of God’ s singular respect to it, and care of it, and his delight in it, and expectation of good fruit from it, &c.
In a very fruitful hill hills being places most commodious for vines: see Psa 80:10 . Heb. in a horn (which may signify either,
1. The figure or shape of the land of Canaan, which resembles a horn; or,
2. The height and hilliness of that land, as horns are the highest parts of beasts; or,
3. The goodliness and excellency of it, as a horn , when it is ascribed to a man, signifies his glory and dignity, as Job 16:1,5 Ps 89:17,24 , &c.) the son of oil , which, by a vulgar Hebraism, notes an oily or a fat soil.

Poole: Isa 5:2 - -- Fenced it that neither men nor beasts might spoil it.
Gathered out the stones thereof which otherwise would have marred the land; of which see 2Ki ...
Fenced it that neither men nor beasts might spoil it.
Gathered out the stones thereof which otherwise would have marred the land; of which see 2Ki 3:19 . The sense is, He removed all hinderances, and gave them all the means of fruitfulness.
Built a tower for the residence of the keepers, that they might be obliged and encouraged to watch over it with more diligence.

I dare make you judges in your own cause, it is so plain and reasonable.
Haydock: Isa 5:1 - -- Down. By the Chaldeans, and after the death of Christ. (Calmet) ---
when God withdraws his aid, man is unable to stand. Yet he falls by his own f...
Down. By the Chaldeans, and after the death of Christ. (Calmet) ---
when God withdraws his aid, man is unable to stand. Yet he falls by his own fault, which God only permits. (Worthington)

Haydock: Isa 5:1 - -- My cousin. So the prophet calls Christ, as being of his family and kindred, by descending from the house of David. (Challoner) (Menochius) ---
He...
My cousin. So the prophet calls Christ, as being of his family and kindred, by descending from the house of David. (Challoner) (Menochius) ---
Hebrew and Septuagint, "beloved." Dod may also mean a near relation. (Calmet) ---
Isaias being of the same tribe, sets before us the lamentations of Christ over Jerusalem, Luke xix. 41. (Worthington) ---
The Hebrews had canticles of sorrow, as well as of joy. The prophet thus endeavours to impress more deeply on the minds of the people what he had been saying. The master of the vineyard is God himself, ver. 7. (Calmet) ---
Hill. Literally, in the horn, the son of oil. (Challoner) ---
The best vines grew among olive and fig trees. (Doubdan 21.) ---
Septuagint, "in a horn, ( mountain ) in a fat soil." (Haydock)

Haydock: Isa 5:2 - -- Stones. They burn and starve in different seasons, Colossians xii. 3. ---
Choicest. Hebrew sorek. (Haydock) ---
There was a famous valley of ...
Stones. They burn and starve in different seasons, Colossians xii. 3. ---
Choicest. Hebrew sorek. (Haydock) ---
There was a famous valley of this name, Judges xvi. 4. The angels guarded the vineyard, in which Abraham, Moses, &c., were found. ---
Tower. To keep the wine, &c., Matthew xxi. 33. It denotes the temple, (Calmet) Scriptures, &c. (Menochius) ---
Wild. Sour, Deuteronomy xxxii. 32.

Judge. God condescends to have his conduct scrutinized, chap. xli. 1.
Gill: Isa 5:1 - -- Now will I sing to my well beloved,.... These are the words of the Prophet Isaiah, being about to represent the state and condition of the people of I...
Now will I sing to my well beloved,.... These are the words of the Prophet Isaiah, being about to represent the state and condition of the people of Israel by way of parable, which he calls a song, and which he determines to sing to his beloved, and calls upon himself to do it; by whom he means either God the Father, whom he loved with all his heart and soul; or Christ, who is often called the beloved of his people, especially in the book of Solomon's song; or else the people of Israel, whom the prophet had a great affection for, being his own people; but it seems best to understand it of God or Christ:
a song of my beloved; which was inspired by him, or related to him, and was made for his honour and glory; or "a song of my uncle" q, for another word is used here than what is in the preceding clause, and is rendered "uncle" elsewhere, see Lev 25:49 and may design King Amaziah; for, according to tradition, Amoz, the father of Isaiah, was brother to Amaziah king of Judah, and so consequently Amaziah must be uncle to Isaiah; and this might be a song of his composing, or in which he was concerned, being king of Judah, the subject of this song, as follows:
touching his vineyard; not his uncle's, though it is true of him, but his well beloved's, God or Christ; the people of Israel, and house of Judah, are meant, comparable to a vineyard, as appears from Isa 5:7 being separated and distinguished from the rest of the nations of the world, for the use, service, and glory of God.
My beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill; or, "in a horn, the son of oil" r; which designs the land of Israel, which was higher than other lands; and was, as some observe, in the form of a horn, longer than it was broad, and a very fruitful country, a land of olive oil, a land flowing with milk and honey, Deu 8:7. The Targum is,
"the prophet said, I will sing now to Israel, who is like unto a vineyard, the seed of Abraham, my beloved, a song of my beloved, concerning his vineyard. My people, my beloved Israel, I gave to them an inheritance in a high mountain, in a fat land.''

Gill: Isa 5:2 - -- And he fenced it,.... With good and wholesome laws, which distinguished them, and kept them separate from other nations; also with his almighty power ...
And he fenced it,.... With good and wholesome laws, which distinguished them, and kept them separate from other nations; also with his almighty power and providence; especially at the three yearly festivals, when all their males appeared before God at Jerusalem:
and gathered out the stones thereof; the Heathens, the seven nations that inhabited the land of Canaan, compared to stones for their hardness and stupidity, and for their worshipping of idols of stone; see Psa 80:8.
and planted it with the choicest vine; the seed of Abraham, Joshua, and Caleb, who fully followed the Lord, and the people of Israel with them, who first entered into the land of Canaan, and inhabited it; such having fallen in the wilderness, who murmured and rebelled against God, Jer 2:21.
and built a tower in the midst of it; in which watchmen stood to keep the vineyard, that nothing entered into it that might hurt it; this may be understood of the city of Jerusalem, or the fortress of Zion, or the temple; so Aben Ezra, the house of God on Mount Moriah; and the Targum,
"and I built my sanctuary in the midst of them:''
and also made a winepress therein; to tread the grapes in; this the Targum explains by the altar, paraphrasing the words,
"and also my altar I gave to make an atonement for their sins;''
so Aben Ezra; though Kimchi interprets it of the prophets, who taught the people the law, that their works might be good, and stirred them up and exhorted them to the performance of them.
And he looked that it should bring forth grapes; this "looking" and "expecting", here ascribed to God, is not to be taken properly, but figuratively, after the manner of men, for from such a well formed government, from such an excellent constitution, from a people enjoying such advantages, it might have been reasonably expected, according to a human and rational judgment of things, that the fruits of righteousness and holiness, at least of common justice and equity, would have been brought forth by them; which are meant by "grapes", the fruit of the vine, see Isa 5:7.
and it brought forth wild grapes; bad grapes; corrupt, rotten, stinking ones, as the word s used signifies; these, by a transposition of letters, are in the Misnah t called
"I commanded them to do good works before me, and they have done evil works.''

Gill: Isa 5:3 - -- And now, O inhabitants of Jerusalem, and men of Judah,.... All and everyone of them, who were parties concerned in this matter, and are designed by th...
And now, O inhabitants of Jerusalem, and men of Judah,.... All and everyone of them, who were parties concerned in this matter, and are designed by the vineyard, for whom so much had been done, and so little fruit brought forth by them, or rather so much bad fruit:
judge, I pray you, between me and my vineyard; between God and themselves; they are made judges in their own cause; the case was so clear and evident, that God is as it were willing the affair should be decided by their own judgment and verdict: so the Targum,
"judge now judgment between me and my people.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 5:1 Heb “on a horn, a son of oil.” Apparently קֶרֶן (qeren, “horn”) here refers to the horn-shaped p...

NET Notes: Isa 5:2 At this point the love song turns sour as the Lord himself breaks in and completes the story (see vv. 3-6). In the final line of v. 2 the love song pr...

Geneva Bible: Isa 5:1 Now will ( a ) I sing to my ( b ) wellbeloved a song of my beloved concerning his vineyard. My wellbeloved hath a ( c ) vineyard in a very fruitful hi...

Geneva Bible: Isa 5:2 And he dug it, and removed its stones, and planted it with the choicest vine, ( d ) and built a tower in the midst of it, and also made a winepress in...

Geneva Bible: Isa 5:3 And now, O inhabitants of Jerusalem, and men of Judah, judge, I pray you, ( f ) between me and my vineyard.
( f ) He makes them judges in their own c...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 5:1-30
TSK Synopsis: Isa 5:1-30 - --1 Under the parable of a vineyard, God excuses his severe judgment.8 His judgments upon covetousness;11 upon lasciviousness;13 upon impiety;20 and upo...
MHCC -> Isa 5:1-7
MHCC: Isa 5:1-7 - --Christ is God's beloved Son, and our beloved Saviour. The care of the Lord over the church of Israel, is described by the management of a vineyard. Th...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 5:1-7
Matthew Henry: Isa 5:1-7 - -- See what variety of methods the great God takes to awaken sinners to repentance by convincing them of sin, and showing them their misery and danger ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 5:1-2 - --
The prophet commenced his first address in chapter 1 like another Moses; the second, which covered no less ground, he opened with the text of an ear...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 5:3-4 - --
The song of the beloved who was so sorely deceived terminates here. The prophet recited it, not his beloved himself; but as they were both of one he...
Constable: Isa 1:1--5:30 - --I. introduction chs. 1--5
The relationship of chapters 1-5 to Isaiah's call in chapter 6 is problematic. Do the ...

Constable: Isa 5:1-30 - --C. The analogy of wild grapes ch. 5
This is the third and last of Isaiah's introductory oracles. The fir...
