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Text -- Isaiah 51:1-3 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Consider the state of Abraham and Sarah, from whom all of you sprang.
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To follow me to an unknown land: him only of all his kindred.
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Wesley: Isa 51:2 - -- Into a vast multitude, when his condition was desperate in the eye of reason. And therefore God can as easily raise his church when they are in the mo...
Into a vast multitude, when his condition was desperate in the eye of reason. And therefore God can as easily raise his church when they are in the most forlorn condition.
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For the sake of Abraham, and of that covenant which I made with him.
The God of your fathers.
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JFB: Isa 51:1 - -- The godly portion of the nation; Isa 51:7 shows this (Pro 15:9; 1Ti 6:11). "Ye follow righteousness," seek it therefore from Me, who "bring it near," ...
The godly portion of the nation; Isa 51:7 shows this (Pro 15:9; 1Ti 6:11). "Ye follow righteousness," seek it therefore from Me, who "bring it near," and that a righteousness "not about to be abolished" (Isa 51:6-7); look to Abraham, your father (Isa 51:2), as a sample of how righteousness before Me is to be obtained; I, the same God who blessed him, will bless you at last (Isa 51:3); therefore trust in Me, and fear not man's opposition (Isa 51:7-8, Isa 51:12-13). The mistake of the Jews, heretofore, has been, not in that they "followed after righteousness," but in that they followed it "by the works of the law," instead of "by faith," as Abraham did (Rom 9:31-32; Rom 10:3-4; Rom 4:2-5).
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JFB: Isa 51:1 - -- The idea is not, as it is often quoted, the inculcation of humility, by reminding men of the fallen state from which they have been taken, but that as...
The idea is not, as it is often quoted, the inculcation of humility, by reminding men of the fallen state from which they have been taken, but that as Abraham, the quarry, as it were (compare Isa 48:1), whence their nation was hewn, had been called out of a strange land to the inheritance of Canaan, and blessed by God, the same God is able to deliver and restore them also (compare Mat 3:9).
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JFB: Isa 51:2 - -- Translate, "I called him when he was but one" (Eze 33:24). The argument is: the same God who had so blessed "one" individual, as to become a mighty na...
Translate, "I called him when he was but one" (Eze 33:24). The argument is: the same God who had so blessed "one" individual, as to become a mighty nation (Gen 12:1; Gen 22:7), can also increase and bless the small remnant of Israel, both that left in the Babylonish captivity, and that left in the present and latter days (Zec 14:2); "the residue" (Isa 13:8-9).
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Hebrew, "psalm." God's praises shall again be heard.
Clarke: Isa 51:1 - -- Ye that follow after righteousness - The people who, feeling the want of salvation, seek the Lord in order to be justified
Ye that follow after righteousness - The people who, feeling the want of salvation, seek the Lord in order to be justified
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Clarke: Isa 51:2 - -- I called him alone - As I have made out of one a great nation; so, although ye are brought low and minished, yet I can restore you to happiness, and...
I called him alone - As I have made out of one a great nation; so, although ye are brought low and minished, yet I can restore you to happiness, and greatly multiply your number.
Calvin: Isa 51:1 - -- 1.Hearken to me, ye that follow righteousness The Prophet now exhorts the Jews not to despair because they are few in number; for they had been cut d...
1.Hearken to me, ye that follow righteousness The Prophet now exhorts the Jews not to despair because they are few in number; for they had been cut down and diminished to such a degree that they appeared to be on the eve of being reduced to nothing, while there was little or no hope of any to succeed them. He therefore reminds them of their origin, that they may know that, though they are a small remnant, God can increase and multiply them; and he bids them contemplate their father Abraham, who, though he was a single individual, grew to a vast number, and received from God a numerous posterity. Hence they might infer that God, who, in so short a period, had multiplied their fathers, would in future multiply them also; because his power has not been diminished, and his will has not been changed.
Look to the rock of your hewing 21 Some are of opinion that Abraham is called a “Rock,” because, as Paul declares, “he was strong in faith.” (Rom 4:20.) Others assign a totally opposite meaning to this metaphor; for they think that he is called a “Rock,” because he was worn out by age, and that Sarah is called a Pit, because she was barren. But both, in my opinion, are in the wrong; for it is a simple metaphor, taken from quarries, and declares that they have descended from Abraham and Sarah, as stones are cut out of a “rock” and a “pit.” Amidst the ruin of the nation it was highly necessary that the godly should be supported by this doctrine and admonition. God had promised that the seed of Abraham should be “as the stars of heaven,” (Gen 15:5,) and as “the sand of the sea.” (Gen 22:17.) This promise had apparently failed amidst that desolation in which they who were left hardly differed at all from a few clusters when the vintage was ended.
But since they had already known by experience how powerful was the strength of God to create a vast people out of nothing, the Prophet bids them cherish favorable hopes, that they may not be ungrateful to God; and he addresses his discourse directly to believers, to whom this was a sore temptation. He does not speak to all, but to those only who could rely on the promise, that is, to those whom he calls “followers of righteousness;” for the country abounded with unbelievers and hypocrites, who had formerly revolted from the practice of piety; and so much the more laudable was the steadfastness of those who did not cease to follow what was right. Wherever “righteousness” is practiced, there God is listened to; and wherever unbelief reigns, reliance cannot be placed on any promise. 22 Although therefore they boasted that they were the children of Abraham, yet all were not capable of receiving this doctrine.
Ye that seek Jehovah He explains the method of “following righteousness” to consist in “seeking the Lord;” for they who make an outward shew of “righteousness,” and do not aim at this end, must have wandered during their whole life. These two things, therefore, must be joined together; namely, the practice of righteousness and seeking God.
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Calvin: Isa 51:2 - -- 2.For I called him alone This application plainly shews what was the design of this exhortation of the Prophet. It was to encourage the hearts of bel...
2.For I called him alone This application plainly shews what was the design of this exhortation of the Prophet. It was to encourage the hearts of believers to cherish the hope of a better condition. He says that he “called him one or alone,” not only because he had none along with him, when he was called out of his country, but because the Lord suffered him to dwell in the land of Canaan without children up to a worn out old age, so that he had no hope of having children, especially because Sarah (Gen 16:2) also was barren; and when at length, as a solace for their childless condition, one son was given to them, not long afterwards he appeared to be led forth to slaughter. Yet the Lord increased and enriched him with a great number of children.
How needful this consolation was to the Jews has been remarked by me a little before, and may be easily learned from their condition, which history plainly declares to have been wretched and unhappy. To us also, in the present day, amidst this distracted condition of the Church, it is highly necessary, that we may not be discouraged because our number is small, and that we may hope that God will increase his Church by unexpected methods. We behold a very clear and striking testimony of this in the blessing by which the Lord increased, even to extreme old age, the posterity of Abraham, who was childless and solitary. That promise relates not to the Jews only, but to other nations; and on this account also he
“was no longer called Abram, but Abraham.”
(Gen 17:5.)
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Calvin: Isa 51:3 - -- 3.Surely Jehovah will comfort Zion The Prophet shews that in the person of Abraham there was exhibited an example which applies to all ages; for, as ...
3.Surely Jehovah will comfort Zion The Prophet shews that in the person of Abraham there was exhibited an example which applies to all ages; for, as the Lord suddenly produced from one man so numerous an offspring, so he will also people his Church by wonderful and unknown methods, and not once only, but whenever she shall be thought to be childless and solitary. In like manner, Paul, after having spoken of the faith of Abraham and praised his excellence, applies that doctrine to each of us, that
“he believed in hope against hope, and that his mind was not driven hither and thither, but that he was fully persuaded that what God had promised he was able also to perform, though it appeared to be incredible and at variance with all reason.”
(Rom 4:18.)
He will comfort all her desolations This may be explained to mean, “The Lord will comfort his Church, not only when she shall be in a flourishing condition, but likewise when she shall be desolate and reduced to solitude; “ for she must have been laid desolate, and her frightful ruins must have brought her to the verge of destruction, before she felt the aid which is here described.
And will make her desert like a place of delights The Prophet here alludes to a passage in the writings of Moses, in which he relates that man was at first placed in “the garden of Eden,” (Gen 2:15,) that is, in “a place of delights,” from which he was driven out by his own fault. (Gen 3:24.) Now we, who have been deprived of that blessing which he bestowed on our first parent, are exiles throughout the whole world, and are deprived of that paradise. Accordingly, whenever great calamities happen, and the order of events is overturned, and everything is thrown into wretched desolation and ruin, let us know that we are punished for our unbelief and for our heinous sins; and let us remember that sentence which was pronounced on our first parent, or rather on all mankind; and that in every part of life, but especially when we see the condition of the Church ruined and overturned. The earth, which otherwise would abound in blessings of every kind, has been reduced to solitude through our fault; and the Church, which would flourish everywhere, has been ruined and laid desolate.
Joy and gladness He means that the change shall be so great that the Church will no longer groan or complain; for, so long as the Church was oppressed by a harsh captivity, nothing could be heard in her but mouming and lamentation. Now restored, she shall rejoice and render thanksgiving to God. Thus we are also exhorted to gratitude, that we may burst out into praise and thanksgiving to God, when we have had experience of his goodness.
Defender -> Isa 51:3
Defender: Isa 51:3 - -- Isaiah here not only confirms the historicity of the garden of Eden but also confirms that all its perfections will one day be restored: God does not ...
Isaiah here not only confirms the historicity of the garden of Eden but also confirms that all its perfections will one day be restored: God does not fail in His purposes."
TSK: Isa 51:1 - -- Hearken : Isa 51:4, Isa 51:7, Isa 46:3, Isa 46:4, Isa 48:12, Isa 55:2, Isa 55:3
ye that follow : Isa 51:7; Psa 94:15; Pro 15:9, Pro 21:21; Mat 5:6, Ma...
Hearken : Isa 51:4, Isa 51:7, Isa 46:3, Isa 46:4, Isa 48:12, Isa 55:2, Isa 55:3
ye that follow : Isa 51:7; Psa 94:15; Pro 15:9, Pro 21:21; Mat 5:6, Mat 6:33; Rom 9:30-32, Rom 14:19; Phi 3:13; 1Ti 6:11; 2Ti 2:22; Heb 12:14
ye that seek : Isa 45:19, Isa 55:6; Psa 24:6, Psa 105:3, Psa 105:4; Amo 5:6; Zep 2:3
look : Gen 17:15-17; Eph 2:11, Eph 2:12
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TSK: Isa 51:1 - -- Hearken : Isa 51:4, Isa 51:7, Isa 46:3, Isa 46:4, Isa 48:12, Isa 55:2, Isa 55:3
ye that follow : Isa 51:7; Psa 94:15; Pro 15:9, Pro 21:21; Mat 5:6, Ma...
Hearken : Isa 51:4, Isa 51:7, Isa 46:3, Isa 46:4, Isa 48:12, Isa 55:2, Isa 55:3
ye that follow : Isa 51:7; Psa 94:15; Pro 15:9, Pro 21:21; Mat 5:6, Mat 6:33; Rom 9:30-32, Rom 14:19; Phi 3:13; 1Ti 6:11; 2Ti 2:22; Heb 12:14
ye that seek : Isa 45:19, Isa 55:6; Psa 24:6, Psa 105:3, Psa 105:4; Amo 5:6; Zep 2:3
look : Gen 17:15-17; Eph 2:11, Eph 2:12
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TSK: Isa 51:2 - -- unto Abraham : Gen 15:1, Gen 15:2, Gen 18:11-13; Jos 24:3; Rom 4:1-5, Rom 4:16-24
for : Gen 12:1-3, Gen 13:14-17, Gen 15:4, Gen 15:5, Gen 22:17, Gen 2...
unto Abraham : Gen 15:1, Gen 15:2, Gen 18:11-13; Jos 24:3; Rom 4:1-5, Rom 4:16-24
for : Gen 12:1-3, Gen 13:14-17, Gen 15:4, Gen 15:5, Gen 22:17, Gen 24:1, Gen 24:35; Neh 9:7, Neh 9:8; Eze 33:24; Gal 3:9-14; Heb 11:8-12
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TSK: Isa 51:3 - -- the Lord : Isa 51:12, Isa 12:1, Isa 40:1, Isa 40:2, Isa 49:13, Isa 54:6-8, Isa 61:1-3, Isa 66:10-14; Psa 85:8; Jer 31:12-14, Jer 31:25; Zep 3:14-20; 2...
the Lord : Isa 51:12, Isa 12:1, Isa 40:1, Isa 40:2, Isa 49:13, Isa 54:6-8, Isa 61:1-3, Isa 66:10-14; Psa 85:8; Jer 31:12-14, Jer 31:25; Zep 3:14-20; 2Co 1:3, 2Co 1:4
all : Isa 44:26, Isa 49:8, Isa 52:9, Isa 61:4; Psa 102:13, Psa 102:14; Jer 33:12, Jer 33:13
make : Isa 35:1, Isa 35:2, Isa 35:7-10, Isa 41:18, Isa 41:19
like the : Gen 2:8, Gen 2:9, Gen 13:10; Eze 31:8-10; Joe 2:3
joy : Jer 33:11; 1Pe 1:8; Rev 19:1-7
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Isa 51:1 - -- Hearken unto me - That is, to the God of their fathers, who now addresses them. They are regarded as in exile and bondage, and as desponding in...
Hearken unto me - That is, to the God of their fathers, who now addresses them. They are regarded as in exile and bondage, and as desponding in regard to their prospects. In this situation, God, or perhaps more properly the Messiah (compare the notes at Isa. 1), is introduced as addressing them with the assurances of deliverance.
Ye that follow after righteousness - This is addressed evidently to those who sought to be righteous, and who truly feared the Lord. There was a portion of the nation that continued faithful to Yahweh. They still loved and worshipped him in exile, and they were anxiously looking for deliverance and for a return to their own land.
Look unto the rock whence ye are hewn - To Abraham the founder of the nation. The figure is taken from the act of quarrying stone for the purposes of building; and the essential idea here is, that God had formed the nation from the beginning, as a mason constructs a building; that he had, so to speak, taken the materials rough and unhewn from the very quarry; that he had shaped, and fitted them, and moulded them into an edifice. The idea is not that their origin was dishonorable or obscure. It is not that Abraham was not an honored ancestor, or that they should be ashamed of the founder of their nation. But the idea is, that God had had the entire moulding of the nation; that he had taken Abraham and Sarah from a distant land, and bad formed them into a great people and nation for his own purpose. The argument is, that he who had done this was able to raise them up from captivity, and make them again a great people. Probably allusion is made to this passage by the Saviour in Mat 3:9, where he says, ‘ For I say unto you, that God is able of these stones to raise up children unto Abraham.’
The hole of the pit - The word rendered ‘ hole’ means such an excavation as men make who are taking stones from a quarry. It expresses substantially the same idea as the previous member of the verse. This language is sometimes addressed to Christians, with a view to produce humility by reminding them that they have been taken by God from a state of sin, and raised up, as it were, from a deep and dark pit of pollution. But this is not the sense of the passage, nor will it bear such an application. It may be used to denote that God has taken them, as stone is taken from the quarry; that he found them in their natural state as unhewn blocks of marble are; that he has moulded and formed them by his own agency, and fitted them into his spiritual temple; and that they owe all the beauty and grace of their Christian deportment to him; that this is an argument to prove that he who had done so much for them as to transform them, so to speak, from rough and unsightly blocks to polished stones, fitted for his spiritual temple on earth, is able to keep them still, and to fit them for his temple above. Such is the argument in the passage before us; and such a use of it is, of course, perfectly legitimate and fair.
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Barnes: Isa 51:2 - -- Look unto Abraham - What was figuratively expressed in the former verse is here expressed literally. They were directed to remember that God ha...
Look unto Abraham - What was figuratively expressed in the former verse is here expressed literally. They were directed to remember that God had taken Abraham and Sarah from a distant land, and that from so humble a beginning he had increased them to a great nation. The argument is, that he was able to bless and increase the exile Jews, though comparatively feeble and few.
For I called him alone - Hebrew, ‘ For one I called him;’ that is, he was alone; there was but one, and he increased to a mighty nation. So Jerome, Quia unum vocavi eum . So the Septuagint,
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Barnes: Isa 51:3 - -- For the Lord shall comfort Zion - On the word ‘ Zion,’ see the notes at Isa 1:8. The meaning here is, that he would again restore it...
For the Lord shall comfort Zion - On the word ‘ Zion,’ see the notes at Isa 1:8. The meaning here is, that he would again restore it from its ruins. The argument is drawn from the statement in the previous verses. If God had raised up so great a nation from so humble all origin, he had power to restore the waste places of Judea to more than their former beauty and prosperity (see the notes at Isa 40:1).
And he will make her wilderness - Judea is here represented as lying waste. It is to be remembered that the time to which the prophet here refers is that of the captivity, and near its close. Of course, as that would have continued seventy years, in so long a period Judea would have become almost an extended wilderness, a wide waste. Any country, that was naturally as fertile as Judea, would in that time be overrun with briers, thorns, and underbrush, and even with a wild and luxuriant growth of the trees of the forest.
Like Eden - Gen. 2 Like a cultivated and fertile garden - distinguished not only for its fertility, but for its beauty and order.
Her desert like the garden of the Lord - Like the garden which the Lord planted Gen 2:8. Septuagint,
Joy and gladness - The sound of rejoicing and praise shall be again heard there, where are now heard the cries of wild beasts.
The voice of melody - Hebrew, ‘ A psalm The praises of God shall again be celebrated.
Poole: Isa 51:1 - -- Hearken to me, ye that follow after righteousness: now he turneth his speech again to the believing and godly Jews.
That seek the Lord that make i...
Hearken to me, ye that follow after righteousness: now he turneth his speech again to the believing and godly Jews.
That seek the Lord that make it your chief care and business to seek favour and help from God.
Look unto the rock whence ye are hewn, and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged consider the state of Abraham and Sarah, when they procreated Isaac, from whom Jacob and all of you sprang; for so he explains the metaphor in the next verse. He compareth the bodies of Abraham and Sarah unto a
rock or pit , or quarry out of which stones are hewed or digged, thereby implying that God in some sort actually did that which Christ said he was able to do , Mat 3:9 , even of stones to raise up children unto Abraham ; it being then as impossible by the course of nature for Abraham and Sarah in that age to procreate a child, as it is to hew a living child out of a rock, or to dig one out of a pit of stone.
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Poole: Isa 51:2 - -- I called him from his own country and kindred to follow me to an unknown land, where I promised that I would multiply and bless him, as is particular...
I called him from his own country and kindred to follow me to an unknown land, where I promised that I would multiply and bless him, as is particularly explained, Gen 12:1-3 .
Alone Heb. one ; either,
1. Him only of all his kindred; for though he carried some few of them with him, yet I called none but him. So this notes God’ s singular favour to their progenitors above all the rest of the world. Or,
2. Him when he was alone or solitary, to wit, as to any issue; when he neither had nor was likely to have any child by Sarah. And this word alone seems to belong not only to this word wherewith it is joined, but also unto the two following words, especially if we consider the order of rite words in the Hebrew text, where they lie thus; for one (or alone , or when he was alone, or but one)
I called him, and blessed him, and increased him Increased him into a vast multitude, when his condition was desperate in the eye of reason. And therefore God can as easily raise and deliver his church when they are in the most forlorn condition, and seem to be dead, and buried, and consumed, so that nothing but dry bones remain of them, as it is declared at large, Eze 37 .
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Poole: Isa 51:3 - -- For: so this comes in as a reason why they should look unto or consider that famous example of Abraham and Sarah, because they should find the like w...
For: so this comes in as a reason why they should look unto or consider that famous example of Abraham and Sarah, because they should find the like wonder wrought on their behalf. Or, Therefore , or for the sake of Abraham, my friend, and of that covenant which I made with him, and by which I promised to bless him and his seed for ever.
Shall comfort Zion his church, which is frequently called by that name, both in the Old and New Testament.
He will make her wilderness like Eden, and her desert like the garden of the Lord: although she shall be waste and desolate like a wilderness or desert for a time, yet she shall be restored, and be made as pleasant and flourishing as the garden of Eden was.
Haydock: Isa 51:1 - -- Lord. He speaks of the redemption of mankind, under the allegory of the return from captivity.
Lord. He speaks of the redemption of mankind, under the allegory of the return from captivity.
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Haydock: Isa 51:2 - -- Alone, and gave him children when he was grown old, and Sara barren. I can surely save you likewise. (Calmet) ---
The example of these great proge...
Alone, and gave him children when he was grown old, and Sara barren. I can surely save you likewise. (Calmet) ---
The example of these great progenitors is set before the Jews. Thus St. Paul says: Remember your prelates, Hebrews xiii. (Worthington)
Gill: Isa 51:1 - -- Hearken unto me, ye that follow after righteousness,.... After having declared the doom of the wicked, and those that trust to their own righteousness...
Hearken unto me, ye that follow after righteousness,.... After having declared the doom of the wicked, and those that trust to their own righteousness, the Lord returns to them that fear him, whom he describes as such that "follow after righteousness"; not the righteousness of the law, it is the character of carnal Israel to follow after that; nor is that attainable in the way it is pursued by such; nor is there any justification by it; nor is following that consistent with seeking the Lord, in the next clause: but the righteousness of Christ is meant; not his essential righteousness as God; nor the righteousness of his office as Mediator; but that which consists of his active and passive obedience; of which he is the author and giver, and is in him as its subject: this is what is commonly called imputed righteousness, an evangelical one, the righteousness of faith, and is justifying: "following after" this supposes a want of one; a sense of that want; a view of this as out of themselves, and in another; a love and liking of it, and a vehement desire for it; and what determines to an eager pursuit of it are its perfection, suitableness, and use: now such persons are called to hearken to the Lord; to the Word of the Lord, as the Targum; to Christ, to his Gospel, and to his ordinances, particularly to what is after said:
ye that seek the Lord: the Lord Christ, for life and salvation; for righteousness and strength; for more grace from him; a greater knowledge of him, and of doctrine from him, as the Targum; and more communion with him; that seek his honour and glory in the world, and to be for ever with him; who seek first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; that seek him where he may be found, affectionately and sincerely, carefully, diligently, constantly, and for everything they want:
look unto the rock whence ye are hewn; which is in the next verse interpreted of Abraham; so called, not so much for the strength of his faith, as for his old age; when he looked like a hard dry rock, from whom no issue could be expected; and yet from hence a large number of stones were hewn, or a race of men sprung:
and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged; that is, to Sarah, who was for a long time barren, whose womb was shut up, but afterwards opened; and from whom, as from a cistern, (to which a wife is sometimes compared, Pro 5:15) flowed the waters of Judah, Isa 48:1 or the Jewish nation. Jerom thinks Christ is meant by both, the Rock of ages, in whom is everlasting strength; to whom men are to look for salvation, righteousness, and strength; and out of whose pierced side flowed blood and water: and in this sense he is followed by Cocceius, who interprets the rock of Christ, the Rock of salvation; out of whose side flowed the church, as out of the hole of a pit or cistern.
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Gill: Isa 51:2 - -- Look unto Abraham your father,.... Not only the father of the Jewish nation, but of all them that believe: this explains what is meant by the rock, in...
Look unto Abraham your father,.... Not only the father of the Jewish nation, but of all them that believe: this explains what is meant by the rock, in the former verse, who is to be looked unto for imitation in the exercise of faith, and performance of duty, and for encouragement in distressed times and circumstances:
and unto Sarah that bare you; signified by the pit or cistern; who was not only the mother of the Jewish nation; but such also are her daughters who do well, and tread in her steps: now the very unpromising circumstances these two persons were in, are proposed to be considered by the church in her present ones, for the encouragement of her faith; that as a numerous issue proceeded from them, so also should she become fruitful and multiply:
for I called him alone, and blessed him, and increased him; he was without issue when he was "called" out of Chaldea into another country, and also the only one of the family; and the Lord "blessed" him not only with flocks and herds, and gold and silver, but with a son in his old age; and so "increased" him, that there sprung from him as many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand by the sea shore innumerable, Heb 11:12. The Septuagint and Arabic versions, between "blessed" and "increased", insert these words, "and I loved him", which are not in the Hebrew text. The Targum is,
"and one was Abraham, alone in the world, and I brought him to my service, and I blessed him, and multiplied him.''
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Gill: Isa 51:3 - -- For the Lord shall comfort Zion,.... The church, by his Spirit, in the ministration of the word, and administration of ordinances; by the donation of ...
For the Lord shall comfort Zion,.... The church, by his Spirit, in the ministration of the word, and administration of ordinances; by the donation of the blessings of grace, and by the application of Gospel promises; by the discoveries of his love; by granting his gracious presence; by blessing his word; and by calling many souls, and adding them to his people: and in order to engage the church and people of God to believe God will do this, and that he can and will bless and increase them when in a low estate, the above instances of calling Abraham alone, and the blessing and increasing him, are produced:
he will comfort all her waste places; by rebuilding them, and restoring them to their former lustre and glory: the church may be said to be "waste" and desolate, and like "a wilderness" and "desert", as in the next clauses, when the doctrines of the Gospel are departed from, the ordinances of public worship are not attended to, and the discipline of it is not kept up; when there are great declensions among the Lord's people, in their faith, love, patience, forbearance, self-denial, spirituality, and heavenly mindedness; when divisions and animosities prevail among them; when there is a negligence in their lives and conversations; and there are but few instances of conversion, and a general unconcernedness about those things; but so it will not always be:
and he will make her wilderness like Eden, and her desert like the garden of the Lord; the church is a "garden", a small spot, in comparison of the world, distinguished and separated by the grace of God from others; in which are many precious souls, comparable to trees, herbs, and plants; and these do not grow up of themselves, but are planted there by the Lord; and much pains are taken by him, the husbandman, to cultivate this garden: for it is his, the garden of the Lord; it is of his planting; it is his property, and enclosed for his rise; it is an Eden, pleasantly situated on a fruitful hill, Christ Jesus, by the river of divine love; is full of pleasant plants, pleasant to the owner of the garden, and to the saints themselves; it becomes fruitful through the dews of divine grace, the rising of Christ, the sun of righteousness, and the blowing of the south wind, the blessed Spirit; and may be said to be in a very comfortable condition, when the word and ordinances are duly ministered; when the graces of the Spirit are in exercise, and many souls are converted: the consequence of which is,
joy and gladness shall be found therein, thanksgiving, and the voice of melody; for the pure preaching of the Gospel; the feast of fat things made in the holy mountain; the presence of God enjoyed; a lively exercise of grace in the saints; and many souls born again. The Targum is,
"joy and rejoicing shall be found in her; they that offer thanksgiving, and the voice of them that praise;''
all hearts filled with joy and gladness.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 51:1 The “rock” and “quarry” refer here to Abraham and Sarah, the progenitors of the nation.
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Geneva Bible: Isa 51:1 Hearken to me, ( a ) ye that follow after righteousness, ye that seek the LORD: look to the ( b ) rock [from which] ye are hewn, and to the hole of th...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 51:3 For the LORD shall comfort Zion: he will comfort all her waste places; and he will make her wilderness ( c ) like Eden, and her desert like the garden...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 51:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Isa 51:1-23 - --1 An exhortation, after the pattern of Abraham, to trust in Christ,3 by reason of his comfortable promises,4 of his righteous salvation,7 and man's mo...
MHCC -> Isa 51:1-3
MHCC: Isa 51:1-3 - --It is good for those privileged by the new birth, to consider that they were shapen in sin. This should cause low thoughts of ourselves, and high thou...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 51:1-3
Matthew Henry: Isa 51:1-3 - -- Observe, 1. How the people of God are here described, to whom the word of this consolation is sent and who are called upon to hearken to it, Isa 51:...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 51:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 51:1-3 - --
The prophetic address now turns again from the despisers of the word, whom it has threatened with the torment of fire, to those who long for salvati...
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...
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Constable: Isa 49:1--55:13 - --B. God's atonement for Israel chs. 49-55
In the previous section (chs. 40-48), Isaiah revealed that God ...
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Constable: Isa 49:1--52:13 - --1. Anticipation of salvation 49:1-52:12
This first segment focuses on the anticipation of salvat...
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Constable: Isa 50:10--51:9 - --Obedience to the Servant 50:10-51:8
The following section is a call to listen to the Ser...
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