
Text -- Isaiah 53:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Isa 53:3
We scorned to look upon him.
JFB: Isa 53:3 - -- "forsaken of men" [GESENIUS]. "Most abject of men." Literally, "He who ceases from men," that is, is no longer regarded as a man [HENGSTENBERG]. (See ...

That is, whose distinguishing characteristic was sorrows.

JFB: Isa 53:3 - -- Literally, "disease"; figuratively for all kinds of calamity (Jer 6:14); leprosy especially represented this, being a direct judgment from God. It is ...
Literally, "disease"; figuratively for all kinds of calamity (Jer 6:14); leprosy especially represented this, being a direct judgment from God. It is remarkable Jesus is not mentioned as having ever suffered under sickness.

JFB: Isa 53:3 - -- Rather, as one who causes men to hide their faces from Him (in aversion) [MAURER]. Or, "He was as an hiding of the face before it," that is, as a thin...
Rather, as one who causes men to hide their faces from Him (in aversion) [MAURER]. Or, "He was as an hiding of the face before it," that is, as a thing before which a man covers his face in disgust [HENGSTENBERG]. Or, "as one before whom is the covering of the face"; before whom one covers the face in disgust [GESENIUS].

JFB: Isa 53:3 - -- The prophet identifying himself with the Jews. See HORSLEY'S view (see on Isa 53:1).
The prophet identifying himself with the Jews. See HORSLEY'S view (see on Isa 53:1).

Negative contempt; the previous words express positive.
Clarke -> Isa 53:3
Clarke: Isa 53:3 - -- Acquainted with grief - For וידוע vidua , familiar with grief, eight MSS. and one edition have וירע veyada , and knowing grief; the Septu...
Acquainted with grief - For
We hid as it were our faces from him "As one that hideth his face from us"- For
There is not schap to him, ne fairnesse
And we seegen him, and he was not of sigte
And we desiriden him dispisid; and the last of men
Man of souaris and witing infirmitie
And he hid his cheer and despisid
Wherfor ne we settiden bi him
Verili our seeknesse he toke and our sorewis he bair
And we helden him as leprous and smyten of God, and meekid
He forsoth wounded is for our wickednesse
Defoulid is for our hidous gilti
The discipline of our pese upon him
And with his wanne wound we ben helid.
Calvin -> Isa 53:3
Calvin: Isa 53:3 - -- 3.Despised and rejected This verse conveys the same statement as the preceding, namely, that Christ will be “rejected” by men, in consequence of ...
3.Despised and rejected This verse conveys the same statement as the preceding, namely, that Christ will be “rejected” by men, in consequence of their beholding in him nothing but grief and infirmity. These things needed to be often repeated to the Jews, that they might not form a false conception of Christ and his kingdom; for, in order to know his glory, we must proceed from his death to his resurrection. Many stumble at his death, as if he had been vanquished and overwhelmed by it; but we ought to contemplate his power and majesty in the resurrection; and if any one choose to begin with the resurrection, he will not follow the order laid down by the Prophet, nor comprehend the Lord’s strength and power.
We hid the face from him Not without reason does he use the first person, we; for he declares that there will be a universal judgment; and no man will ever be able to comprehend it by his own understanding till the Lord correct and form him anew by his Spirit. Although he appears chiefly to censure the Jews, who ought not to have so haughtily rejected the Son of God promised and offered to them, and therefore reckons himself as one of the number, because he was an individual belonging to that nation; yet let us learn from this passage that all men are accursed and condemned for ingratitude in despising Christ, because they do not even consider him to be worthy of being looked at, but turn away their eyes as if from something detestable.
Defender: Isa 53:3 - -- Just as Adam and Eve tried to hide from God (Gen 3:8), so we try to hide our rebellious ways from Christ.
Just as Adam and Eve tried to hide from God (Gen 3:8), so we try to hide our rebellious ways from Christ.

Defender: Isa 53:3 - -- Literally, "we estimated Him as nothing" - the typical reaction of the world to Jesus Christ as our suffering substitute."
Literally, "we estimated Him as nothing" - the typical reaction of the world to Jesus Christ as our suffering substitute."
TSK -> Isa 53:3
TSK: Isa 53:3 - -- despised : Isa 49:7, Isa 50:6; Psa 22:6-8, Psa 69:10-12, Psa 69:19, Psa 69:20; Mic 5:1; Zec 11:8, Zec 11:12, Zec 11:13; Mat 26:67, Mat 27:39-44, Mat 2...
despised : Isa 49:7, Isa 50:6; Psa 22:6-8, Psa 69:10-12, Psa 69:19, Psa 69:20; Mic 5:1; Zec 11:8, Zec 11:12, Zec 11:13; Mat 26:67, Mat 27:39-44, Mat 27:63; Mar 9:12, Mar 15:19; Luk 8:53, Luk 9:22, Luk 16:14; Luk 23:18-25; Joh 8:48; Heb 12:2, Heb 12:3
a man : Isa 53:4, Isa 53:10; Psa 69:29; Mat 26:37, Mat 26:38; Mar 14:34; Luk 19:41; Joh 11:35; Heb 2:15-18, Heb 4:15, Heb 5:7
we hid as it were our faces from him : or, he hid as it were, his face from us. Heb. as a hiding of faces from him or from us. we esteemed. Deu 32:15; Zec 11:13; Mat 27:9, Mat 27:10; Joh 1:10,Joh 1:11; Act 3:13-15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 53:3
Barnes: Isa 53:3 - -- He is despised - This requires no explanation; and it needs no comment to show that it was fulfilled. The Redeemer was eminently the object of ...
He is despised - This requires no explanation; and it needs no comment to show that it was fulfilled. The Redeemer was eminently the object of contempt and scorn alike by the Pharisees, the Sadducees, and the Romans. In his life on earth it was so; in his death it was still so; and since then, his name and person have been extensively the object of contempt. Nothing is a more striking fulfillment of this than the conduct of the Jews at the present day. The very name of Jesus of Nazareth excites contempt; and they join with their fathers who rejected him in heaping on him every term indicative of scorn.
Rejected of men - This phrase is full of meaning, and in three words states the whole history of man in regard to his treatment of the Redeemer. The name ‘ The Rejected of Men,’ will express all the melancholy history; rejected by the Jews; by the rich; the great and the learned; by the mass of people of every grade, and age, and rank. No prophecy was ever more strikingly fulfilled; none could condense more significancy into few words. In regard to the exact sense of the phrase, interpreters have varied. Jerome renders it, Novissium virorum - ‘ The last of men;’ that is, the most abject and contemptible of mankind. The Septuagint, ‘ His appearance is dishonored (
The word
There was a ceasing, or a withdrawing of that which usually pertains to man, and which belongs to him. And the thought probably is, that he was not only ‘ despised,’ but that there was an advance on that - there was a ceasing to treat him as if he had human feelings, and was in any way entitled to human fellowship and sympathy. It does not refer, therefore, so much to the active means employed to reject him, as to the fact that he was regarded as cut off from man; and the idea is not essentially different from this, that he was the most abject and vile of mortals in the estimation of others; so vile as not to be deemed worthy of the treatment due to the lowest of men. This idea has been substantially expressed in the Syriac translation.
A man of sorrows - What a beautiful expression! A man who was so sad and sorrowful; whose life was so full of sufferings, that it might be said that that was the characteristic of the man. A similar phraseology occurs in Pro 29:1, ‘ He that being often reproved,’ in the margin, ‘ a man of reproofs;’ in the Hebrew, ‘ A man of chastisements,’ that is, a man who is often chastised. Compare Dan 10:11 : ‘ O Daniel, a man greatly beloved,’ Margin, as in Hebrew, ‘ A man of desires; that is, a man greatly desired. Here, the expression means that his life was characterized by sorrows. How remarkably this was fulfilled in the life of the Redeemer, it is not necessary to attempt to show.
And acquainted with grief - Hebrew,
And we hid as it were our faces from him - There is here great variety of interpretation and of translation. The margin reads, ‘ As an hiding of faces from him,’ or ‘ from us,’ or, ‘ He hid as it were his face from us.’ The Hebrew is literally, ‘ And as the hiding of faces from him, or from it;’ and Hengstenberg explains it as meaning, ‘ He was as an hiding of the face before it.’ that is, as a thing or person before whom a man covers his face, because he cannot bear the disgusting sight. Jerome (the Vulgate) renders it, ‘ His face was as it were hidden and despised.’ The Septuagint, ‘ For his countenance was turned away’ (
1. ‘ He was as one who hides his face before us;’ alluding, as they suppose, to the Mosaic law, which required lepers to cover their faces Lev 13:45, or to the custom of covering the face in mourning, or for shame.
2. Others explain it as meaning, ‘ as one before whom is the covering of the face, that is, before whom a man covers the face from shame or disgust. So Gesenius.
3. Others, ‘ He was as one causing to conceal the face,’ that is, he induced others to cover the face before him. His sufferings were so terrible as to induce them to turn away. So John H. Michaelis.
The idea seems to be, that he was as one from whom people hide their faces, or turn away. This might either arise from a sight of his sufferings, as being so offensive that they would turn away in pain - as in the case of a leper; or it might be, that he was so much an object of contempt, and so unlike what they expected, that they would hide their faces and turn away in scorn. This latter I suppose to be the meaning; and that the idea is, that he was so unlike what they had expected, that they hid their faces in affected or real contempt.
And we esteemed him not - That is, we esteemed him as nothing; we set no value on him. In order to give greater energy to a declaration, the Hebrews frequently express a thing positively and then negatively. The prophet had said that they held him in positive contempt; he here says that they did not regard him as worthy of their notice. He here speaks in the name of his nation - as one of the Jewish people. ‘ We, the Jews, the nation to whom he was sent, did not esteem him as the Messiah, or as worthy of our affection or regard.’
Poole -> Isa 53:3
Poole: Isa 53:3 - -- He is despised and rejected of men accounted as the scum of mankind, as one unworthy of the company and conversation of all men.
A man of sorrows w...
He is despised and rejected of men accounted as the scum of mankind, as one unworthy of the company and conversation of all men.
A man of sorrows whose whole life was filled with, and in a manner made up of, an uninterrupted succession of sorrows and sufferings.
Acquainted with grief who had constant experience of and familiar converse with grievous afflictions; for knowledge is oft taken practically, or for experience, as Gen 3:5 2Co 5:21 , and elsewhere.
We hid as it were our faces from him we scorned and loathed to look upon him. Or, as others,
he hid as it were his face from us, as one ashamed to show his face, or to be seen by any men, as persons conscious to themselves of any great deformity do commonly shun the sight of men, as lepers did, Lev 13:45 .
He was despised, and we esteemed him not: here are divers words expressing the same thing, to signify both the utmost degree of contempt, and how strange and wonderful a thing it was, that so excellent a person should be so despised.
Haydock -> Isa 53:3
Haydock: Isa 53:3 - -- Not. The whole life of Christ was spent in the midst of poverty, and contradictions, Hebrews iv. 15. He has thus taught us to despise ourselves.
Not. The whole life of Christ was spent in the midst of poverty, and contradictions, Hebrews iv. 15. He has thus taught us to despise ourselves.
Gill -> Isa 53:3
Gill: Isa 53:3 - -- He is despised, and rejected of men,.... Or, "ceaseth from men" f; was not admitted into the company and conversation of men, especially of figure; or...
He is despised, and rejected of men,.... Or, "ceaseth from men" f; was not admitted into the company and conversation of men, especially of figure; or ceased from the class of men, in the opinion of others; he was not reckoned among men, was accounted a worm, and no man; or, if a man, yet not in his senses, a madman, nay, one that had a devil: or "deficient of men"; he had none about him of any rank or figure in life, only some few fishermen, and some women, and publicans, and harlots. The Vulgate Latin version renders it, "the last of men", the most abject and contemptible of mankind; despised, because of the meanness of his birth, and parentage, and education, and of his outward appearance in public life; because of his apostles and audience; because of his doctrines, not agreeably to carnal reason, and his works, some of them being done on the sabbath day, and, as they maliciously suggested, by the help of Satan; and especially because of his ignominious sufferings and death:
a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: or "known by grief" g; he was known by his troubles, notorious for them; these were his constant companions, his familiar acquaintance, with whom he was always conversant; his life was one continued series of sorrow, from the cradle to the cross; in his infancy his life was sought for by Herod, and he was obliged to be taken by his parents, and flee into Egypt; he ate his bread in sorrow, and with the sweat of his brow; he met with much sorrow from the hardness and unbelief of men's hearts, and from the contradiction of sinners against himself, and even much from the frowardness of his own disciples; much from the temptations of Satan, and more from the wrath and justice of God, as the surety of his people; he was exceeding sorrowful in the garden, when his sweat was as it were great drops of blood; and when on the cross, under the hidings of his Father's face, under a sense of divine displeasure for the sins of his people, and enduring the pains and agonies of a shameful and an accursed death; he was made up of sorrows, and grief was familiar to him. Some render it, "broken with infirmity", or "grief" h:
and we hid as it were our faces from him; as one loathsome and abominable as having an aversion to him, and abhorrence of him, as scorning to look at him, being unworthy of any notice. Some render it, "he hid as it were his face from us" i; as conscious of his deformity and loathsomeness, and of his being a disagreeable object, as they said; but the former is best:
he was despised, and we esteemed him not; which is repeated to show the great contempt cast upon him, and the disesteem he was had in by all sorts of persons; professors and profane, high and low, rich poor, rulers and common people, priests, Scribes, and Pharisees; no set or order of men had any value for him; and all this disgrace and dishonour he was to undergo, to repair the loss of honour the Lord sustained by the sin of man, whose surety Christ became.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Isa 53:3 The servant is likened to a seriously ill person who is shunned by others because of his horrible disease.
Geneva Bible -> Isa 53:3
Geneva Bible: Isa 53:3 He is despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with ( e ) grief: and we hid as it were [our] faces from him; he was despised, an...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 53:1-12
TSK Synopsis: Isa 53:1-12 - --1 The prophet, complaining of incredulity, excuses the scandal of the cross,4 by the benefit of his passion,10 and the good success thereof.
MHCC -> Isa 53:1-3
MHCC: Isa 53:1-3 - --No where in all the Old Testament is it so plainly and fully prophesied, that Christ ought to suffer, and then to enter into his glory, as in this cha...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 53:1-3
Matthew Henry: Isa 53:1-3 - -- The prophet, in the close of the former chapter, had foreseen and foretold the kind reception which the gospel of Christ should find among the Genti...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 53:3
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 53:3 - --
On the contrary, the impression produced by His appearance was rather repulsive, and, to those who measured the great and noble by a merely worldly ...
Constable: Isa 40:1--55:13 - --IV. Israel's calling in the world chs. 40--55
This part of Isaiah picks up a theme from chapters 1-39 and develo...

Constable: Isa 49:1--55:13 - --B. God's atonement for Israel chs. 49-55
In the previous section (chs. 40-48), Isaiah revealed that God ...

Constable: Isa 52:13--54:1 - --2. Announcement of salvation 52:13-53:12
The second segment of the section in Isaiah dealing wit...
