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Text -- Isaiah 52:1-6 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Isa 52:1 - -- This is a prediction and promise what she should do, that she should awake or arise out of her low estate, and be strong and courageous.
This is a prediction and promise what she should do, that she should awake or arise out of her low estate, and be strong and courageous.
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Wesley: Isa 52:1 - -- Thy sorrows shall be ended, and thou shalt be advanced into a glorious condition.
Thy sorrows shall be ended, and thou shalt be advanced into a glorious condition.
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The yoke of thy captivity shall be taken off from thee.
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Wesley: Isa 52:3 - -- By your sins, without any valuable consideration paid by them either to you, or to your Lord and owner.
By your sins, without any valuable consideration paid by them either to you, or to your Lord and owner.
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Wesley: Isa 52:4 - -- Where they had protection and sustenance, and therefore owed subjection to the king of Egypt. And yet when he oppressed them, I punished him severely,...
Where they had protection and sustenance, and therefore owed subjection to the king of Egypt. And yet when he oppressed them, I punished him severely, and delivered them out of his hands.
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Wesley: Isa 52:4 - -- The king of Babylon, who is called the king of Assyria, 2Ki 23:29, as also the Persian emperor is called, Ezr 6:22, because it was one and the same em...
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Wesley: Isa 52:4 - -- Without any such ground or colour, by mere force invading their land, and carrying them away into captivity.
Without any such ground or colour, by mere force invading their land, and carrying them away into captivity.
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Wesley: Isa 52:5 - -- Why do I sit still here, and not go to Babylon to punish the Babylonians, and to deliver my people? For nought - Without any provocation, or pretence ...
Why do I sit still here, and not go to Babylon to punish the Babylonians, and to deliver my people? For nought - Without any provocation, or pretence of right.
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Wesley: Isa 52:5 - -- The Babylonians blasphemed me as if I wanted either power or good will to save my people out of their hands.
The Babylonians blasphemed me as if I wanted either power or good will to save my people out of their hands.
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They shall experience my power and goodness in fighting for them.
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Wesley: Isa 52:6 - -- When I shall redeem my people: which work was begun by the return of the Jews from Babylon, and perfected by the coming of the Messiah.
When I shall redeem my people: which work was begun by the return of the Jews from Babylon, and perfected by the coming of the Messiah.
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That all these promises are the words of the omnipotent, unchangeable God.
JFB: Isa 52:1 - -- As thy adornment; answering to "beautiful garments" in the parallel clause. Arouse thyself from dejection and assume confidence.
As thy adornment; answering to "beautiful garments" in the parallel clause. Arouse thyself from dejection and assume confidence.
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JFB: Isa 52:2 - -- Namely, in a more dignified place: on a divan or a throne [LOWTH], after having shaken off the dust gathered up by the flowing dress when seated on th...
Namely, in a more dignified place: on a divan or a throne [LOWTH], after having shaken off the dust gathered up by the flowing dress when seated on the ground; or simply, "Arise, and sit erect" [MAURER].
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JFB: Isa 52:3 - -- As you became your foes' servants, without their paying any price for you (Jer 15:13), so they shall release you without demanding any price or reward...
As you became your foes' servants, without their paying any price for you (Jer 15:13), so they shall release you without demanding any price or reward (Isa 45:13), (where Cyrus is represented as doing so: a type of their final restoration gratuitously in like manner). So the spiritual Israel, "sold under sin," gratuitously (Rom 7:14), shall be redeemed also gratuitously (Isa 55:1).
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Judea was an elevated country compared with Egypt.
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They went there to stay only till the famine in Canaan should have ceased.
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JFB: Isa 52:4 - -- Sennacherib. Remember how I delivered you from Egypt and the Assyrian; what, then, is to prevent Me from delivering you out of Babylon (and the mystic...
Sennacherib. Remember how I delivered you from Egypt and the Assyrian; what, then, is to prevent Me from delivering you out of Babylon (and the mystical Babylon and the Antichrist in the last days)?
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JFB: Isa 52:4 - -- Answering to "for naught" in Isa 52:5; it was an act of gratuitous oppression in the present case, as in that case.
Answering to "for naught" in Isa 52:5; it was an act of gratuitous oppression in the present case, as in that case.
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JFB: Isa 52:5 - -- That is, what am I called on to do? The fact "that My people is taken away (into captivity; Isa 49:24-25) for naught" (by gratuitous oppression, Isa 5...
That is, what am I called on to do? The fact "that My people is taken away (into captivity; Isa 49:24-25) for naught" (by gratuitous oppression, Isa 52:4; also Isa 52:3, and see on Isa 52:3) demands My interposition.
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Or "tyrannize," namely, Babylon, literal and mystical.
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Or, raise a cry of exultation over them [MAURER].
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JFB: Isa 52:5 - -- Namely, in Babylon: God's reason for delivering His people, not their goodness, but for the sake of His holy name (Eze 20:9, Eze 20:14).
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JFB: Isa 52:6 - -- When Christ shall reveal Himself to Israel sensibly; the only means whereby their obstinate unbelief shall be overcome (Psa 102:16; Zec 12:10; Zec 14:...
When Christ shall reveal Himself to Israel sensibly; the only means whereby their obstinate unbelief shall be overcome (Psa 102:16; Zec 12:10; Zec 14:5).
Clarke: Isa 52:1 - -- There shall no more come into thee - For ×™×‘× yabo , "shall come," ×œ×‘× lebo , "to come,"is the reading of five of Kennicott’ s and two of...
There shall no more come into thee - For
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Clarke: Isa 52:1 - -- The uncircumcised and the unclean - Christians have turned many passages of the prophets against the Jews; and it is not to be wondered at, that in ...
The uncircumcised and the unclean - Christians have turned many passages of the prophets against the Jews; and it is not to be wondered at, that in support of their obstinate and hopeless cause, they should press a prophecy into their service, and make it speak against the Christians. This Kimchi does in this place; for he says, by the uncircumcised, the Christians are meant; and by the unclean the Turks. The Christians are uncircumcised and the Turks, though circumcised, and using many ablutions, are unclean in their works.
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Clarke: Isa 52:2 - -- Sit down, O Jerusalem "Ascend thy lofty seat, O Jerusalem"- The literal rendering here is, according to our English translation, "arise, sit;"on whi...
Sit down, O Jerusalem "Ascend thy lofty seat, O Jerusalem"- The literal rendering here is, according to our English translation, "arise, sit;"on which a very learned person remarks: "So the old versions. But sitting is an expression of mourning in Scripture and the ancients; and doth not well agree with the rising just before."It does not indeed agree, according to our ideas; but, considered in an oriental light, it is perfectly consistent. The common manner of sitting in the eastern countries is upon the ground or the floor with the legs crossed. The people of better condition have the floors of their chambers or divans covered with carpets for this purpose; and round the chamber broad couches, raised a little above the floor, spread with mattresses handsomely covered, which are called sofas. When sitting is spoken of as a posture of more than ordinary state, it is quite of a different kind; and means sitting on high, on a chair of state or throne called the musnud; for which a footstool was necessary, both in order that the person might raise himself up to it, and for supporting the legs when he was placed in it. "Chairs,"says Sir John Chardin, "are never used in Persia, but at the coronation of their kings. The king is seated in a chair of gold set with jewels, three feet high. The chairs which are used by the people in the east are always so high as to make a footstool necessary. And this proves the propriety of the style of Scripture, which always joins the footstool to the throne."(Isa 66:1; Psa 105:1.) Voyages, tom. 9 p. 85, 12mo. Besides the six steps to Solomon’ s throne, there was a footstool of gold fastened to the seat, 2Ch 9:18, which would otherwise have been too high for the king to reach, or to sit on conveniently
When Thetis comes to wait on Vulcan to request armor for her son, she is received with great respect, and seated on a silver-studded throne, a chair of ceremony, with a footstool: -
Iliad 18:389
"High on a throne, with stars of silver graced
And various artifice, the queen she placed
A footstool at her feet.
Pope
Athenaeus, 5:4
"A throne is n othing more than a handsome sort of chair with a footstool."- L.
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Clarke: Isa 52:4 - -- Thus saith the Lord God - ××“× ×™ יהוה Adonai Jehovah ; but Adonai is wanting in twelve of Kennicott’ s, five of De Rossi’ s, and t...
Thus saith the Lord God -
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Clarke: Isa 52:5 - -- They that rule over them "They that are lords over them"- For משלו moshelo , singular, in the text, more than a hundred and twenty MSS. (De Ros...
They that rule over them "They that are lords over them"- For
Make them to howl "Make their boast of it"- For
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Clarke: Isa 52:6 - -- Therefore my people shall know - The word לכן lachen , occurring the second time in this verse, seems to be repeated by mistake. It has no force...
Therefore my people shall know - The word
I am he that Moth speak "I am he, Jehovah, that promised"- For
Calvin: Isa 52:1 - -- 1.Awake, awake He confirms the former doctrine, in order still more to arouse the people who had been weighed down by grief and sorrow. These things ...
1.Awake, awake He confirms the former doctrine, in order still more to arouse the people who had been weighed down by grief and sorrow. These things were necessary to be added as spurs, that the doctrine might more easily penetrate into their drowsy and stupified hearts; for he addresses the Church, which appeared to be in a benumbed and drowsy condition, and bids her “awake,†that she may collect her strength and revive her courage, he repeats it a second time, and with great propriety; for it is difficult to arouse and reanimate those whose hearts have been struck, and even laid prostrate, by a sense of God’s anger.
Put on thy strength As if he had said, “Formerly thou wast dejected, and wallowedst in filth and pollution; now prepare for a happy and prosperous condition, to which the Lord will restore thee.†Thus he contrasts “strength†with despondency, such as is usually found when affairs are desperate; and he contrasts garments of beauty with filth and pollution.
For henceforth there shall not come to thee The reason assigned by him is, that henceforth God will not permit wicked men to indulge their sinful inclinations for destroying it. Freed from their tyranny, the Church already has cause to rejoice; and security for the future holds out solid ground for joy and gladness. Yet Isaiah exhorts us to mutual congratulation when God is reconciled to his Church; and indeed if we have any piety in us, we ought to be deeply affected by her condition, that we may rejoice in her prosperity, and be grieved in her adversity. 37 In short, it ought to be the height of our gladness, as also the Psalmist says,
“Let my tongue cleave to my jaws, if I remember not thee, and if thou be not the crown of my gladness.†(Psa 137:6.)
By the word come, he means what we commonly express by the phrase, (Avoir e entree,) “to have access.â€
By the uncircumcised and unclean, he means all irreligious persons who corrupt the worship of God and oppress consciences by tyranny. It was customary to apply the term “uncircumcised†to all who were estranged from the Church, which had for its symbol “circumcision,†by which all believers were distinguished. But as very many persons, though they bore this outward mark of the covenant, were not better than others, in order to remove all doubt, he added the word “unclean;†for the mark of “circumcision is nothing in itself,†(Gal 5:6,) and (unless, as Paul says, there be added purity of heart) “is even reckoned uncircumcision.†(Rom 2:25,) Accordingly, he declares that henceforth such persons shall not be admitted into the Church, in order that, by the removal of corruptions, and the restoration of the worship of God, she may possess perfect joy. Yet I do not object to viewing these words as applied to outward foes, whom he calls by hateful names, that even the severity of the punishment may warn the Jews of the heinousness of their offenses.
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Calvin: Isa 52:2 - -- 2.Shake thyself from the dust; arise He explains more fully the deliverance of the Church, and exhibits it prominently by ὑποτύπωσιν , â...
2.Shake thyself from the dust; arise He explains more fully the deliverance of the Church, and exhibits it prominently by
Sit, O Jerusalem, The word “sit†denotes a flourishing condition, and is contrasted with the word “to lie,†which denotes the lowest calamity. Sometimes indeed it means “to be prostrate,†as when he formerly said to Babylon, “sit in the dust.†(Isa 47:1.) But here the meaning is different; for, after ordering her to arise, he likewise adds, “that she may sit;†that is, that she may no longer lie down, but may regain her former condition, and not be in future laid prostrate by enemies.
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Calvin: Isa 52:3 - -- 3.For thus saith Jehovah This verse has been badly expounded by many commentators, who have here chosen to enter into philosophical subtleties; for t...
3.For thus saith Jehovah This verse has been badly expounded by many commentators, who have here chosen to enter into philosophical subtleties; for they have dreamed of many things at variance with the Prophet’s meaning. It agrees with what he had formerly stated,
“To which of my creditors have I sold you?†(Isa 1:1.)
For here, in the same manner, he says, “Ye have been sold for nought;†as if he had said that he has received no price, and is under no obligations to a creditor who can claim them as having been purchased by him. This tends greatly to confirm the promise; because the Jews might entertain doubts of the liberty which was promised to them, in consequence of their having been long held in possession by the Babylonians, who were the most powerful of all nations. The Lord meets this doubt. “I did not sell or make a conveyance of you to them; for nought were ye sold; and therefore I can justly claim you as nay property and sell you. Do not then consider how great are your difficulties, when I promise you liberty, and do not reason on this matter by human arguments; for the Babylonians have no right to detain you, and cannot prevent your being set at liberty.
Therefore shall ye be redeemed without money Lastly, as he had formerly said, that he is not like a spendthrift, who is compelled to sell his children, or offer them in payment, so in this passage he declares that “for nought he sold†and gave them up to their enemies, for no other reason than because they had provoked him by their sins; and therefore that there will be no greater difficulty in delivering them than in giving them up to their enemies.
Some explain it more ingeniously thus, that Christ has redeemed us by free grace. This doctrine must indeed be maintained, but does not agree with the Prophet’s meaning, who intended to correct the distrust of the Jews, that they might have no doubt as to their being set at liberty. Let it suffice to know, that when God shall be pleased to deliver his people, it will not be necessary to make a pecuniary bargain with the Babylonians, whom, in spite of their opposition, he will have no difficulty in driving out of their unjust possession.
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Calvin: Isa 52:4 - -- 4.Into Egypt my people went down aforetime Here also the commentators touch neither heaven nor earth; for the Jews dream of three captivities, and Ch...
4.Into Egypt my people went down aforetime Here also the commentators touch neither heaven nor earth; for the Jews dream of three captivities, and Christians differ from them by thinking that this denotes a third captivity, which shall be under Antichrist, and from which Christ will deliver them. But the Prophet’s meaning, in my opinion, is quite different; for he argues from the less to the greater, by quoting the instance of the Egyptian captivity, from which the people were formerly recalled by the wonderful power of God. (Exo 14:28.) The argument therefore stands thus: “If the Lord punished the Egyptians because their treatment of his people was harsh and unjust, (Gen 15:14,) much more will he punish the Babylonians, who have cruelly tyrannized over them.â€
But the Assyrian has oppressed them without cause There was much greater plausibility in Pharaoh’s claim of dominion over the Jews than in that of the Babylonians; for Jacob, having voluntarily come down to Egypt with his family, (Gen 46:5,) undoubtedly became subject to the power of Pharaoh, who, in return for the kindness received from Joseph, 38 had assigned to him a large country and abundant pasturage. Pharaoh’s successors, ungrateful and forgetful of the benefit conferred on them by Joseph, afflicted all the posterity of Jacob in various ways. This ingratitude and cruelty the Lord severely punished. But far more base and savage was the wickedness of the Babylonians, who drove the Jews out of a lawful possession, and dragged them into bondage. If then the Lord could not bear the Egyptians, who were unthankful and ruled by unjust laws, though in other respects they had a just title to possession, much less will he endure the violent and cruel Babylonians, who have no right to govern his people and oppress them by tyranny.
By “the Assyrian,†he means the Babylonians, who were united under the same monarchy with the Assyrians; but he takes special notice of “the Assyrian,†because he was the first that grievously distressed the Jews, and that prepared the way for this captivity.
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Calvin: Isa 52:5 - -- 5.What have I here? He follows out and confirms what I have already said, that it; is not reasonable that he should silently permit his people to be ...
5.What have I here? He follows out and confirms what I have already said, that it; is not reasonable that he should silently permit his people to be any longer oppressed. By these words he reproves, in some measure, his own delay; as if he had said, “Shall I not stretch out my hand? Shall I not avenge my people? If Pharaoh did not hinder me, though he was a lawful master, shall the violence of robbers hinder me?†He next enumerates the reasons which ought to move him to bring back the people.
That my people should be carried away for nought There must be understood an implied contrast to the participle “carried away;†for the Egyptians did not “carry away†Jacob by force; he came down to it of his own accord when he was pressed by famine, yet he was delivered from it; 39 how much more shall he be rescued out of the hand of those who tore him from his native country, and carried him by violence into captivity?
That they should cause them to howl In order to express more forcibly the baseness of this conduct, he says that they are constrained to howl without ceasing. Some translate the vero as neuter; 40 but I think that it is intended to express the strength of their hatred, and therefore I consider it to be an active verb, expressive of the violence which the Babylonians exercised towards the Jews; for they not only ruled unjustly over them, but also treated them harshly. To “howl†is more than to sigh or weep; for there is reason to believe that the pain which sends forth loud and strong cries is exceedingly severe. The metaphor is taken from wild beasts, and denotes extreme despair.
The third and principal reason why the Lord will deliver his people is, that his name is continually exposed to the reproach and blasphemy of wicked men. For the sake of his own honor the Lord preserves the Church, and defends the pure worship of his name. Because wicked men seize on the Church’s calamitous state as a reason for blasphemy, and insolently mock God, with good reason does he say, that by delivering his people, he will plead his own cause. I do not here relate the various interpretations, or stay to refute them; for it will be enough for me to have briefly explained the Prophet’s real meaning.
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Calvin: Isa 52:6 - -- 6.Therefore shall my people know In this verse he concludes what he had glanced at in the two preceding verses, that at length the people must be red...
6.Therefore shall my people know In this verse he concludes what he had glanced at in the two preceding verses, that at length the people must be redeemed by God, who cannot be unlike himself; for, if he redeemed the fathers, if he always assisted the Church, their posterity, whom he has adopted in the same manner, will never be suffered by him to be overwhelmed. We ought carefully to observe the word “know;†for to “know the name of the Lord†is to lay aside every false opinion, and to know him from his word, which is his true image, and next from his works. We must not imagine God according to the fancy of men, but must comprehend him as he declares himself to us. The Lord, therefore, concludes that he will actually assist them, and will fulfill all that he has promised, that the people may know that their hope has not been without foundation, and that they may be more and more confirmed in the knowledge of his name. We must keep in remembrance what we have elsewhere said about experimental knowledge, which confirms the truth of the word.
That it is I who speak The verb “to speak†relates to the promises.
TSK: Isa 52:2 - -- Shake : Isa 3:26, Isa 51:23; Jer 51:6, Jer 51:45, Jer 51:50; Zec 2:6; Rev 18:4
arise : The common mode of sitting in the East is upon the floor, with ...
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TSK: Isa 52:4 - -- My people : Gen 46:6; Act 7:14, Act 7:15
the Assyrian : Isa 14:25, 36:1-37:38; Jer 50:17
without : Job 2:3; Psa 25:3, Psa 69:4; Joh 15:25
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TSK: Isa 52:5 - -- what : Isa 22:16; Jdg 18:3
people : Isa 52:3; Psa 44:12
make : Isa 47:6, Isa 51:20,Isa 51:23; Exo 1:13-16, Exo 2:23, Exo 2:24, Exo 3:7; Psa 137:1, Psa...
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TSK: Isa 52:6 - -- my people : Exo 33:19, Exo 34:5-7; Psa 48:10; Eze 20:44, Eze 37:13, Eze 37:14, Eze 39:27-29; Zec 10:9-12; Heb 8:10,Heb 8:11
I am he : Isa 42:9; Num 23...
my people : Exo 33:19, Exo 34:5-7; Psa 48:10; Eze 20:44, Eze 37:13, Eze 37:14, Eze 39:27-29; Zec 10:9-12; Heb 8:10,Heb 8:11
I am he : Isa 42:9; Num 23:19; Heb 6:14-18
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Isa 52:1 - -- Awake, awake - (See the notes at Isa 51:9). This address to Jerusalem is intimately connected with the closing verses of the preceding chapter....
Awake, awake - (See the notes at Isa 51:9). This address to Jerusalem is intimately connected with the closing verses of the preceding chapter. Jerusalem is there represented as down-trodden in the dust before her enemies. Here she is described under the image of a female that had been clad in the habiliments of mourning, and she is now called on to arise from this condition, and to put on the garments that would be indicative of gladness and of joy. The idea is, that the time had come now in which she was to be delivered from her long captivity, and was to be restored to her former prosperity and splendor.
Put on thy strength - Hebrew, ‘ Clothe thyself with thy strength.’ The idea is, exert thyself, be strong, bold, confident; arise from thy dejection, and become courageous as one does when he is about to engage in an enterprise that promises success, and that demands effort.
Put on thy beautiful garments - Jerusalem is here addressed, as she often is, as a female (see the note at Isa 1:8). She was to lay aside the garments expressive of grief and of captivity, and deck herself with those which were appropriate to a state of prosperity.
The uncircumcised and the unclean - The idea is, that those only should enter Jerusalem and dwell there who would be worshippers of the true God. The uncircumcised are emblems of the impure, the unconverted, and the idolatrous; and the meaning is, that in future times the church would be pure and holy. It cannot mean that no uncircumcised man or idolater would ever again enter the city of Jerusalem, for this would not be true. It was a fact that Antiochus and his armies, and Titus and his army entered Jerusalem, and undoubtedly hosts of others did also who were not circumcised. But this refers to the future times, when the church of God would be pure. Its members would, in the main, be possessors of the true religion, and would adorn it. Probably, therefore, the view of the prophet extended to the purer and happier times under the Messiah, when the church should be characteristically and eminently holy, and when, as a great law of that church, none should be admitted, who did not profess that they were converted.
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Barnes: Isa 52:2 - -- Shake thyself from the dust - To sit on the ground, to sit in the dust, is an expression descriptive of mourning Job 2:13. Jerusalem is here ca...
Shake thyself from the dust - To sit on the ground, to sit in the dust, is an expression descriptive of mourning Job 2:13. Jerusalem is here called on to arise and shake off the dust, as indicating that the days of her grief were ended, and that she was about to be restored to her former beauty and splendor.
Arise and sit down - There is an incongruity in this expression in our translation, which does not occur in the original. The idea in the Hebrew is not that which seems to be implied in this expression to arise and sit down in the same place, but it means to arise from the dust, and sit in a more elevated, or honorable place. She had been represented as sitting on the earth, where her loose flowing robes would be supposed to become covered with dust. She is here called on to arise from that humble condition, and to occupy the divan, or a chair of dignity and honor. Lowth renders this, ‘ Ascend thy lofty seat,’ and supposes it means that she was to occupy a throne, or an elevated seat of honor, and he quotes oriental customs to justify this interpretation. Noyes renders it, ‘ Arise and sit erect.’ The Chaldee renders it, ‘ Rise, sit upon the throne of thy glory.’ The following quotation, from Jowett’ s Christian Researches, will explain the custom which is here alluded to: ‘ It is no uncommon thing to see an individual, or group of persons, even when very well dressed, sitting with their feet drawn under them, upon the bare earth, passing whole hours in idle conversation.
Europeans would require a chair, but the natives here prefer the ground. In the heat of summer and autumn, it is pleasant to them to while away their time in this manner, under the shade of a tree. Richly adorned females, as well as men, may often be seen thus amusing themselves. As may naturally be expected, with whatever care they may, at first sitting down, choose their place, yet the flowing dress by degrees gathers up the dust; as this occurs, they, from time to time, arise, adjust themselves, shake off the dust, and then sit down again. The captive daughter of Zion, therefore, brought down to the dust of suffering and oppression, is commanded to arise and shake herself from that dust, and then, with grace, and dignity, and composure, and security, to sit down; to take, as it were, again her seat and her rank, amid the company of the nations of the earth, which had before afflicted her, and trampled her to the earth.’
Loose thyself from the bands of thy neck - Jerusalem had been a captive, and confined as a prisoner. She is now called on to cast off these chains from her neck, and to be again at liberty. In captivity, chains or bands were attached to various parts of the body. They were usually affixed to the wrists or ankles, but it would seem also that sometimes collars were affixed to theneck. The idea is, that the Jews, who had been so long held captive, were about to be released, and restored to their own land.
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Barnes: Isa 52:3 - -- Ye have sold yourselves for nought - You became captives and prisoners without any price being paid for you. You cost nothing to those who made...
Ye have sold yourselves for nought - You became captives and prisoners without any price being paid for you. You cost nothing to those who made you prisoners. The idea is, that as they who had made them prisoners had done so without paying any price for them, it was equitable that they should be released in the same manner. When their captors had paid nothing for them, God would suffer nothing to be paid for them in turn; and they should be released, as they had been sold, without a price paid for them. Perhaps God intends here to reproach them for selling themselves in this manner without any compensation of any kind, and to show them the folly of it; but, at the same time, he intends to assure them that no price would be paid for their ransom.
Ye shall be redeemed - You shall be delivered from your long and painful captivity without any price being paid to the Babylonians. This was to be a remarkable proof of the power of God. Men do not usually give up captives and slaves, in whatever way they may have taken them, without demanding a price or ransom. But here God says that he designs to effect their deliverance without any such price being demanded or paid, and that as they had gone into captivity unpurchased, so they should return unpurchased. Accordingly he so overruled events as completely to effect this. The Babylonians, perhaps, in no way could have been induced to surrender them. God, therefore, designed to raise up Cyrus, a mild, just, and equitable prince; and to dispose him to suffer the exiles to depart, and to aid them in their return to their own land. In this way, they were rescued without money and without price, by the interposition of another.
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Barnes: Isa 52:4 - -- For thus saith the Lord God - In order to show them that he could redeem them without money, God reminds them of what had been done in former t...
For thus saith the Lord God - In order to show them that he could redeem them without money, God reminds them of what had been done in former times. The numerous captives in Egypt, whose services were so valuable to the Egyptians, and whom the Egyptians were so unwilling to suffer to depart, he had rescued by his own power, and had delivered for ever from that bondage. The idea here is, that with the same ease he could rescue the captives in Babylon, and restore them to their own land without a price.
My people went down - That is, Jacob and his sons. The phrase ‘ went down,’ is applied to a journey to Egypt, because Judea was a mountainous and elevated country compared with Egypt, and a journey there was in fact a descent to a more level and lower country.
To sojourn there - Not to dwell there permanently, but to remain there only for a time. They went in fact only to remain until the severity of the famine should have passed by, and until they could return with safety to the land of Canaan.
And the Assyrians oppressed them without cause - A considerable variety has existed in the interpretation of this passage. The Septuagint renders it, ‘ And to the Assyrians they were carried by force.’ Some have supposed that this refers to the oppressions that they experienced in Egypt, and that the name ‘ Assyrian’ is here given to Pharaoh. So Forerius and Cajetan understand it. They suppose that the name, ‘ the Assyrian,’ became, in the apprehension of the Jews, the common name of that which was proud, oppressive, and haughty, and might therefore be used to designate Pharaoh. But there are insuperable objections to this. For the name ‘ the Assyrian’ is not elsewhere given to Pharaoh in the Scriptures, nor can it be supposed to be given to him but with great impropriety. It is not true that Pharaoh was an Assyrian; nor is it true that the Israelites were oppressed by the Assyrians while they remained in Egypt. Others have supposed that this refers to Nebuchadnezzar and the Chaldeans in general, and that the name ‘ the Assyrian’ is given them in a large and general sense, as ruling over that which constituted the empire of Assyria, and that the prophet here refers to the calamities which they were suffering in Babylon. But the objection to this is not the less decisive.
It is true that Babylon was formerly a part or province of Assyria, and true also that in the time of the Jewish captivity it was the capital of the kingdom of which the former empire of Assyria became a subject province. But the name Babylonian, in the Scriptures, is kept distinct from that of Assyrian, and they are not used interchangeably. Nor does the connection of the passage require us to understand it in this sense. The whole passage is in a high degree elliptical, and something must be supplied to make out the sense. The general design of it is, to show that God would certainly deliver the Jews from the captivity at Babylon without money. For this purpose, the prophet appeals to the former instances of his interposition when deliverance had been effected in that way. A paraphrase of the passage, and a filling up of the parts which are omitted in the brief and abrupt manner of the prophet, will show the sense. ‘ Ye have been sold for nought, and ye shall be ransomed without price.
As a proof that I can do it, and will do it, remember that my people went down formerly to Egypt, and designed to sojourn there for a little time, and that they were there reduced to slavery, and oppressed by Pharaoh, but that I ransomed them without money, and brought them forth by my own power. Remember, further, how often the Assyrian has oppressed them also, without cause. Remember the history of Sennacherib, Tiglath-pileser, and Salmaneser, and how they have laid the land waste, and remember also how I have delivered it from these oppressions. With the same certainty, and the same ease, I can deliver the people from the captivity at Babylon.’ The prophet, therefore, refers to different periods and events; and the idea is, that God had delivered them when they had been oppressed alike by the Egyptian, and by the Assyrians, and that he who had so often interposed would also rescue them from their oppression in Babylon.
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Barnes: Isa 52:5 - -- Now, therefore, what have I here? - In Babylon, referring to the captivity of the Jews there. The idea is, that a state of things existed there...
Now, therefore, what have I here? - In Babylon, referring to the captivity of the Jews there. The idea is, that a state of things existed there which demanded his interposition as really as it did when his people had been oppressed by the Egyptians, or by the Assyrian. His people had been taken away for nought; they were subject to cruel oppressions; and his own name was continually blasphemed. In this state of things, it is inferred, that he would certainly come to their rescue, and that his own perfections as well as their welfare demanded that he should interpose to redeem them. The phrase, ‘ what have I here?’ is equivalent to saying, what shall I do? what am I properly called on to do? or what reason is there now in Babylon for my interposition to rescue my people? It is implied, that such was the state of things, that God felt that there was something that demanded his interposition.
That my people is taken away for nought - This was one thing existing in Babylon that demanded his interposition. His people had been made captive by the Chaldeans, and were now suffering under their oppressions. This had been done ‘ for nought;’ that is, it had been done without any just claim. It was on their part a mere act of gross and severe oppression, and this demanded the interposition of a righteous God.
They that rule over them make them to howl - Lowth renders this, ‘ They that are lords over them make their boast of it.’ Noyes renders it, ‘ And their tyrants exult.’ The Septuagint renders it, ‘ My people are taken away for nought: wonder ye, and raise a mournful cry’ (
And my name continually every day is blasphemed - That is, in Babylon. The proud and oppressive Babylonians delight to add to the sorrows of the exiles by reproaching the name of their God, and by saying that he was unable to defend them and their city from ruin. This is the third reason why God would interpose to rescue them. The three reasons in this verse are, that they had been taken away for nought; that they were suffering grievous and painful oppression; and that the name of God was reproached. On all these accounts he felt that he had something to do in Babylon, and that his interposition was demanded.
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Barnes: Isa 52:6 - -- Therefore my people shall know my name - The idea in this verse is, that his people should have such exhibitions of his power as to furnish to ...
Therefore my people shall know my name - The idea in this verse is, that his people should have such exhibitions of his power as to furnish to them demonstration that he was God.
Poole: Isa 52:1 - -- Awake, awake; put on thy strength: God biddeth his church do that which she entreated him to do, Isa 51:9 . And because God’ s word is operativ...
Awake, awake; put on thy strength: God biddeth his church do that which she entreated him to do, Isa 51:9 . And because God’ s word is operative, and effectual, and his sayings are doings, this is a prediction and promise what she should do, that she should awake or arise out of her low estate, and be strong and courageous.
Put on thy beautiful garments: thy sorrows shall be ended, and thou shalt be advanced into a most glorious and blessed condition.
O Jerusalem, the holy city O my church, which is every where called by the name of Zion or Jerusalem.
For henceforth there shall no more come into thee either to molest thee, or to associate themselves with thee, or to defile or corrupt thee, the uncircumcised , heathens or infidels, who are commonly called uncircumcised; and the unclean ; nor any others, who though they be circumcised, as the Jews generally were, are unclean in any thing: whereby he intimates that there should be a greater purity and reformation in the church than formerly there had been, which was eminently accomplished in the church and kingdom of Christ.
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Poole: Isa 52:2 - -- Shake thyself from the dust in which thou hast lain as a prisoner, or sat as a mourner.
Sit down upon thy throne. Or, sit up, as this word is rende...
Shake thyself from the dust in which thou hast lain as a prisoner, or sat as a mourner.
Sit down upon thy throne. Or, sit up, as this word is rendered, Gen 27:19 .
Loose thyself from the bands of thy neck the yoke of thy captivity shall be taken off from thee. It is a metaphor from beasts that have the yoke fastened by bands to their necks.
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Poole: Isa 52:3 - -- Ye have sold yourselves by your sins, into the hands of the Chaldeans,
for nought without any price or valuable consideration paid by them, either ...
Ye have sold yourselves by your sins, into the hands of the Chaldeans,
for nought without any price or valuable consideration paid by them, either to you or to me, your Lord and Owner.
Ye shall be redeemed without money without paying any ransom.
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Poole: Isa 52:4 - -- My people went down aforetime into Egypt to sojourn there where they had protection and sustenance, and therefore owed subjection to the king of Egyp...
My people went down aforetime into Egypt to sojourn there where they had protection and sustenance, and therefore owed subjection to the king of Egypt. And yet when he oppressed them I punished him severely, and delivered them out of his hands. Which is easily understood from the following words. And ; or, but ; for here is an opposition made between these two cases.
The Assyrian the king of Babylon, who is called the king of Assyria , 2Ki 23:29 , compared with Isa 24:7 , as also the Persian emperor is called, Ezr 6:22 , because it was one and the same empire, which was possessed, first by the Assyrians, then by the Babylonians, and afterwards by the Persians. Oppressed them without cause ; without any such ground or valour , by mere force invading their land, and carrying them away into captivity. For although it be said that God gave this land and people into his hand , 2Ch 36:11 , by his counsel and providence; yet that was neither known to nor regarded by the king of Babylon, nor was it a good and lawful title, God’ s word, and not his providence, being the rule by which men’ s rights are determined; otherwise a robber hath a right to my purse, which he cannot take from me upon the highway without God’ s providence.
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Poole: Isa 52:5 - -- What have I here? Heb. What to me here ? the sense is either,
1. What do I here? Why do I sit still here, and not go to Babylon to punish the Babyl...
What have I here? Heb. What to me here ? the sense is either,
1. What do I here? Why do I sit still here, and not go to Babylon to punish the Babylonians, and to deliver my people? Or,
2. What honour have I by suffering this injury to be done to my people?
Is taken away were carried away captive by the Babylonians,
for nought without any provocation or pretence of right. See before on Isa 52:3 . They that rule over then, who by their office are obliged to deal justly and tenderly with their subjects,
make them to howl by their tyrannical and unmerciful usage of them.
My name continually every day is blasphemed instead of that praise and service which the Babylonians owe me for all their successes and conquests, they blaspheme me, as if I wanted either power or good-will to save my people out of their hands.
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Poole: Isa 52:6 - -- My people shall know my name they shall have sensible experience of my infinite power and goodness in fighting for them and against you; whereby they...
My people shall know my name they shall have sensible experience of my infinite power and goodness in fighting for them and against you; whereby they shall be able to put your blasphemous tongues to silence.
They shall know which word is understood from the foregoing clause, as is very frequent in Scripture.
In that day when I shall redeem my people: which work was begun by the return of the Jews from Babylon, and afterwards carried on, and at last perfected, by the coming of the Messiah.
That I am he that doth speak: behold, it is I: that all these promises are not the words of a weak, or fickle, or deceitful man, but of him who is the omnipotent, and unchangeable, and covenant-keeping God. Or thus, That I who have formerly spoken to you by my servants the prophets, (for it was the Spirit of Christ which was and spake in them , 1Pe 1:11 ) do now speak to you in my own person, being clothed with flesh; which agrees well, as with the analogy of faith, and with divers other scriptures, so particularly with the next verse, and with divers following passages, which so evidently speak of the person and kingdom of Christ, that they cannot without great force be understood of any other.
Haydock: Isa 52:1 - -- Thee. Judea was no more laid waste by its ancient enemies. The persecution of Epiphanes did not continue long. Many have attacked the Church; but ...
Thee. Judea was no more laid waste by its ancient enemies. The persecution of Epiphanes did not continue long. Many have attacked the Church; but they cannot overcome her, nor will she cease to preach the truth, and to continue pure and holy.
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Haydock: Isa 52:3 - -- Money. The Chaldeans acted impolitically in leaving the country without inhabitants, and Cyrus will derive no immediate advantage from your return. ...
Money. The Chaldeans acted impolitically in leaving the country without inhabitants, and Cyrus will derive no immediate advantage from your return. (Calmet) ---
The Jews had not injured the Chaldeans, nor mankind the devil. But both had offended God, who out of mercy paid their ransom. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Isa 52:4 - -- Assyrian. Pharao, (Sa; Tirinus) or rather Nabuchodonosor, (Calmet) and the princes of Assyria, who acted tyrannically. (Haydock)
Assyrian. Pharao, (Sa; Tirinus) or rather Nabuchodonosor, (Calmet) and the princes of Assyria, who acted tyrannically. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Isa 52:5 - -- Long, by the Chaldeans, weak Jews, and strangers, who misconstrue my conduct towards my people, and represent it as the effect of injustice, or of we...
Long, by the Chaldeans, weak Jews, and strangers, who misconstrue my conduct towards my people, and represent it as the effect of injustice, or of weakness.
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Here. Jesus Christ appears, the Redeemer foretold so long before.
Gill: Isa 52:1 - -- Awake, awake, put on thy strength, O Zion,.... Aben Ezra says, all interpreters agree that this prophecy is yet to be fulfilled, and so it is: by Zion...
Awake, awake, put on thy strength, O Zion,.... Aben Ezra says, all interpreters agree that this prophecy is yet to be fulfilled, and so it is: by Zion is meant the church in Gospel times, in the latter day glory, which is called upon to awake out of sleep; and this repeated to show what a deep sleep had fallen on her, the danger she was in through it, and the vehemency of the speaker, or the great concern the Lord had for her; and this is the very state and case of the church of Christ now, and the prophecy respects our times, and what follow. There is a general carnal security, and spiritual drowsiness, which has seized the people of God; a non-exercise of grace among them, at least it is not a lively one; a sluggishness to and in duty; a contentment in the external performance of it; an indifference about the cause of Christ, and power of religion; and an unconcernedness about the truths and ordinances of the Gospel, the discipline of Christ's house, and the honour of it; which the enemy takes the advantage of, and sows his tares of false doctrine and worship; wherefore it is high time to "awake" out of sleep, and to "put on strength", or "clothe" e with it, and do the Lord's will, and work and oppose the enemy. Saints are weak in themselves, but they have strength in Christ, and on him should they wait, to him should they look, and on him should they exercise faith for it; they should put on the whole armour of God, clothe themselves with it, resume courage, pluck up a good heart and spirit, and not fear any difficulties, dangers, and enemies.
Put on thy beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the holy city; another name for the Gospel church, see Heb 12:22, and which is called "the holy city"; referring to the times in the latter day, when holiness shall more appear and prevail in the churches; when saints shall be built up in their holy faith, and more closely attend to holy ordinances, and walk in an holy conversation and godliness; and especially the New Jerusalem church state will answer to this name, and so it is called, Rev 21:2, and when the saints will "put on" their "beautiful garments", as on holy days, and times of rejoicing; their mourning will be over, and all signs of it shall be laid aside; the witnesses will no more prophesy in sackcloth; the marriage of the Lamb will be come; the bride made ready, being clothed with fine linen, clean and white, the righteousness of the saints, the garments of Christ's salvation, and the robe of his righteousness; which are the beautiful garments here meant, which serve for many, and answer all the purposes of a garment; as to cover nakedness, preserve from the inclemency of the weather, keep warm and comfortable, beautify and adorn; and beautiful they are, being all of a piece, large and long, pure and spotless, rich and glorious, and which make those beautiful that wear them; and though, being once on, they are never off again; yet saints sometimes are remiss in their acts of faith in putting them on, to which they are here exhorted; see Rev 19:7,
for henceforth there shall no more come into thee the uncircumcised and the unclean; this shows that the prophecy cannot be understood of Jerusalem literally, nor of the times of the Babylonish captivity, and deliverance from it, since after this the uncircumcised and the unclean did enter into it, Antiochus Epiphanes, Pompey, and the Romans; but of the mystical Jerusalem, the church of Christ, in the latter day, the spiritual reign of Christ; when the Gentiles, the Papists, meant by the uncircumcised and the unclean, shall no more "come against" them, as the words f may be rendered, and persecute them; and when there will be no more a mixture of Papists and Protestants, of heretics and orthodox, of hypocrites and saints; and when there will be few or none under a profession but will have the truth of grace in them; when every pot and vessel in Jerusalem will be holiness to the Lord, and the Heathen will be perished out of the land, Zec 14:21, and especially this will be true in the personal reign of Christ, in the New Jerusalem church state, into which nothing shall enter that defiles, or makes an abomination, and a lie, Rev 21:27.
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Gill: Isa 52:2 - -- Shake thyself from the dust,.... Or "the dust from thee" g, in which she had sat, or rolled herself as a mourner; or where she had been trampled upon ...
Shake thyself from the dust,.... Or "the dust from thee" g, in which she had sat, or rolled herself as a mourner; or where she had been trampled upon by her persecutors and oppressors; but now being delivered from them, as well as from all carnal professors and false teachers, she is called upon to shake herself from the dust of debasement and distress, of false doctrine, superstition, and will worship, in every form and shape, a great deal of which adheres to those churches called reformed.
Arise, and sit down, O Jerusalem; or "sit up", as it may be rendered; arise from thy low estate, from the ground and dust where thou art cast;
"and sit upon the throne of thy glory,''
so the Targum: it denotes the exaltation of the church from a low to a high estate, signified by the ascension of the witnesses to heaven, Rev 11:12. Some render it, "arise, O captivity"; or "captive" h; so the word is used in Isa 49:24 and agrees with what follows:
loose thyself from the bands of thy neck, O captive daughter of Zion; or loose thou "the bands off thy neck from thee"; which seems to denote the people of God in mystical Babylon, a little before its destruction, who will be called out of it, as they afterwards are in this chapter; and to throw off the Romish yoke, and release themselves from that captivity and bondage they have been brought into by the man of sin, who now himself shall be led captive, Rev 13:10.
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Gill: Isa 52:3 - -- For thus saith the Lord, ye have sold yourselves for nought,.... As Ahab did to work wickedness; as men do freely, and get nothing by it; for there is...
For thus saith the Lord, ye have sold yourselves for nought,.... As Ahab did to work wickedness; as men do freely, and get nothing by it; for there is nothing got in the service of sin, Satan, and antichrist, or by being slaves and vassals to them; not profit, but loss; not pleasure, but pain; not honour, but shame; not liberty, but bondage; not riches and wealth, but poverty and want, which Popery always brings into those countries and people where it obtains.
And ye shall be redeemed without money; in like manner as our spiritual and eternal redemption from sin, Satan, and the law, the world, death, and hell, is obtained; not without the price of the precious blood of the Lamb, but without such corruptible things as silver and gold, 1Pe 1:18 and without any price paid to those by whom we are held captive, but to God, against whom we have sinned, whose law we have broken, and whose justice must be satisfied; and the blood of Christ is a sufficient price to answer all: hence redemption, though it cost Christ much, is entirely free to us; so will the redemption of the church, from the bondage and slavery of antichrist, be brought about by the power of God undeserved by them; not through their merits, and without any ransom price paid to those who held them captives.
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Gill: Isa 52:4 - -- For thus saith the Lord God,.... The Lord confirms what he had before said of redeeming his people without money, who had been sold for nothing, by pa...
For thus saith the Lord God,.... The Lord confirms what he had before said of redeeming his people without money, who had been sold for nothing, by past instances of his deliverance of them:
my people went down aforetime into Egypt to sojourn there; Jacob and his family went down there of their own accord, where they were supplied with food in a time of famine, and settled in a very fruitful part of it; but when they were oppressed, and cried to the Lord, he appeared for them, and delivered them:
and the Assyrian oppressed them without cause; which some understand of Pharaoh, king of Egypt, who they say was an Assyrian, or so called, because of his power and cruelty; or it being usual to call any enemy of the Jews an Assyrian: or rather the words may be rendered, "but the Assyrian", &c. Pharaoh had some pretence for what he did; the Israelites came into his country, he did not carry them captive; they received many benefits and favours there, and were settled in a part of his dominions, so that he might claim them as his subjects, and refuse to dismiss them; but the Assyrians had nothing to do with them; could not make any pretence why they should invade them, and oppress them; and therefore if the Lord had delivered them from the one, he would also deliver them from the other. This may be understood of the several invasions and captivities by Pul, Tiglathpileser, Shalmaneser, Sennacherib, and even Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon; Babylon having been the metropolis of Assyria, and a branch of the Assyrian empire, though now translated to the Chaldeans: or the sense is, and the Assyrians also oppressed Israel, as well as the Egyptians, without any just reason, and I delivered them out of their hands; and so I will redeem my church and people out of antichristian bondage and slavery.
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Gill: Isa 52:5 - -- Now therefore what have I here, saith the Lord, that my people is taken away for nought?.... Or what do I get by it, that my people should be taken an...
Now therefore what have I here, saith the Lord, that my people is taken away for nought?.... Or what do I get by it, that my people should be taken and held in captivity without cause? I am no gainer, but a loser by it, as it afterwards appears; and therefore why should I sit still, and delay the deliverance of my people any longer? but as I have delivered Israel out of Egypt, and the Jews from Babylon, so will I deliver my people out of mystical Babylon, spiritually called Sodom and Egypt.
They that rule over them cause them to howl, saith the Lord; they that hath carried them captive, and exercised a tyrannical power over them, cause them to howl under their bondage and slavery, as the Israelites formerly in Egypt; wherefore the Lord is moved with compassion to them, and since neither he nor they were gainers, but losers by their captivity, he determines to deliver them: or it may be rendered, "they cause its rulers to howl" i, or his rulers howl; not the common people only, but their governors, civil and ecclesiastical; so Aben Ezra interprets it not of Heathen rulers, but of the great men of Israel:
and my name continually every day is blasphemed; by ascribing their extent of power and authority, their dominions and conquests, not to the Lord, but to their idols, whom they worship, to such or such a saint; opening their mouths in blasphemy against God, his name and tabernacle, and his people, Rev 13:5. The Targum is,
"and always, all the day, because of the worship of my name, they provoke.''
The Septuagint is, "for you always my name is blasphemed among the Gentiles"; see Rom 2:24.
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Gill: Isa 52:6 - -- Therefore my people shall know my name,.... His nature and perfections; his faithfulness in fulfilling his promises to them; his power in delivering t...
Therefore my people shall know my name,.... His nature and perfections; his faithfulness in fulfilling his promises to them; his power in delivering them out of their bondage; and his justice in punishing their enemies.
Therefore they shall know on that day that I am he that doth speak: behold, it is I; they shall then see, when the people of God are delivered from the antichristian slavery and bondage, and when Babylon is fallen, that all the promises God has spoken are yea and amen; that Jesus Christ is the true and faithful witness; and that these are his true and faithful sayings, which he has spoken.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 52:1 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
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NET Notes: Isa 52:2 The Hebrew text has שְּׂבִי (shÿvi), which some understand as a feminine singular imperative from ...
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NET Notes: Isa 52:5 The verb is apparently a Hitpolal form (with assimilated tav, ת) from the root נָאַץ (na’ats), but GKC 151-5...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 52:1 Awake, awake; put on thy strength, O Zion; put on thy beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the holy city: for henceforth there shall no ( a ) more come in...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 52:2 Shake thyself from the ( b ) dust; arise, [and] sit down, O Jerusalem: loose thyself from the bands of thy neck, O captive daughter of Zion.
( b ) Pu...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 52:3 For thus saith the LORD, Ye have sold yourselves for ( c ) nothing; and ye shall be redeemed without money.
( c ) The Babylonians paid nothing to me ...
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Geneva Bible: Isa 52:4 For thus saith the Lord GOD, My people went ( d ) down in times past into Egypt to sojourn there; and the Assyrian ( e ) oppressed them without cause....
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Geneva Bible: Isa 52:5 Now therefore, what have I here, saith the LORD, that my people is taken away for nothing? they that rule over them make them to wail, saith the LORD;...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 52:1-15
TSK Synopsis: Isa 52:1-15 - --1 Christ persuades the church to believe his free redemption,7 to receive the ministers thereof,9 to joy in the power thereof,11 and to free themselve...
Maclaren -> Isa 52:3
Maclaren: Isa 52:3 - --A Paradox Of Selling And Buying
Ye have sold yourselves for nought; and ye shall be redeemed without money.'--Isaiah 52:3.
THE first reference of the...
MHCC -> Isa 52:1-12
MHCC: Isa 52:1-12 - --The gospel proclaims liberty to those bound with fears. Let those weary and heavy laden under the burden of sin, find relief in Christ, shake themselv...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 52:1-6
Matthew Henry: Isa 52:1-6 - -- Here, I. God's people are stirred up to appear vigorous for their own deliverance, Isa 52:1, Isa 52:2. They had desired that God would awake and ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 52:1-2; Isa 52:3-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 52:1-2 - --
The same call, which was addressed in Isa 51:9 to the arm of Jehovah that was then represented as sleeping, is here addressed to Jerusalem, which is...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 52:3-6 - --
The reason for the address is now given in a well-sustained promise. "For thus saith Jehovah, Ye have been sold for nothing, and ye shall not be re...
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 51:9--52:13 - --Awakening to deliverance 51:9-52:12
The presence and repetition of the call to awake (51...
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