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Text -- Isaiah 57:1-3 (NET)

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Context
57:1 The godly perish, but no one cares. Honest people disappear, when no one minds that the godly disappear because of evil. 57:2 Those who live uprightly enter a place of peace; they rest on their beds. 57:3 But approach, you sons of omen readers, you offspring of adulteresses and prostitutes!
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Righteous | REST | Peace | Isaiah, The Book of | Isaiah | Idolatry | Holiness | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | ENCHANTMENT | Death | Adultery | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

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NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Isa 57:1 - -- Just and holy men.

Just and holy men.

Wesley: Isa 57:1 - -- Few or none.

Few or none.

Wesley: Isa 57:1 - -- Is duly affected with this sad sign of God's displeasure.

Is duly affected with this sad sign of God's displeasure.

Wesley: Isa 57:2 - -- This just and merciful man shall enter into a state of rest, where he shall be out of the reach of the approaching miseries.

This just and merciful man shall enter into a state of rest, where he shall be out of the reach of the approaching miseries.

Wesley: Isa 57:2 - -- just men. Here is a sudden change of the number, which is very frequent in the prophets.

just men. Here is a sudden change of the number, which is very frequent in the prophets.

Wesley: Isa 57:2 - -- In their graves, which are not unfitly called their beds, as their death is commonly called sleep in scripture.

In their graves, which are not unfitly called their beds, as their death is commonly called sleep in scripture.

Wesley: Isa 57:3 - -- To God's tribunal, to receive your sentence.

To God's tribunal, to receive your sentence.

Wesley: Isa 57:3 - -- Not by propagation, but by imitation.

Not by propagation, but by imitation.

Wesley: Isa 57:3 - -- Not the genuine children of Abraham, their dispositions were far more suitable to a bastardly brood, than to Abraham's seed.

Not the genuine children of Abraham, their dispositions were far more suitable to a bastardly brood, than to Abraham's seed.

JFB: Isa 57:1 - -- As a public calamity.

As a public calamity.

JFB: Isa 57:1 - -- Rather, godly men; the subjects of mercy.

Rather, godly men; the subjects of mercy.

JFB: Isa 57:1 - -- Namely, what was the design of Providence in removing the godly.

Namely, what was the design of Providence in removing the godly.

JFB: Isa 57:1 - -- Hebrew, from the face of the evil, that is, both from the moral evil on every side (Isa 56:10-12), and from the evils about to come in punishment of t...

Hebrew, from the face of the evil, that is, both from the moral evil on every side (Isa 56:10-12), and from the evils about to come in punishment of the national sins, foreign invasions, &c. (Isa 56:9; Isa 57:13). So Ahijah's death is represented as a blessing conferred on him by God for his piety (1Ki 14:10-13; see also 2Ki 22:20).

JFB: Isa 57:2 - -- Or, "he entereth into peace"; in contrast to the persecutions which he suffered in this world (Job 3:13, Job 3:17). The Margin not so well translates,...

Or, "he entereth into peace"; in contrast to the persecutions which he suffered in this world (Job 3:13, Job 3:17). The Margin not so well translates, "he shall go in peace" (Psa 37:37; Luk 2:29).

JFB: Isa 57:2 - -- The calm rest of their bodies in their graves (called "beds," 2Ch 16:14; compare Isa 14:18; because they "sleep" in them, with the certainty of awaken...

The calm rest of their bodies in their graves (called "beds," 2Ch 16:14; compare Isa 14:18; because they "sleep" in them, with the certainty of awakening at the resurrection, 1Th 4:14) is the emblem of the eternal "rest" (Heb 4:9; Rev 14:13).

JFB: Isa 57:2 - -- This clause defines the character of those who at death "rest in their beds," namely, all who walk uprightly.

This clause defines the character of those who at death "rest in their beds," namely, all who walk uprightly.

JFB: Isa 57:3 - -- In contrast to "the righteous" and their end, he announces to the unbelieving Jews their doom.

In contrast to "the righteous" and their end, he announces to the unbelieving Jews their doom.

JFB: Isa 57:3 - -- That is, ye that are addicted to sorcery: this was connected with the worship of false gods (2Ki 21:6). No insult is greater to an Oriental than any s...

That is, ye that are addicted to sorcery: this was connected with the worship of false gods (2Ki 21:6). No insult is greater to an Oriental than any slur cast on his mother (1Sa 20:30; Job 30:8).

JFB: Isa 57:3 - -- Spiritual adultery is meant: idolatry and apostasy (Mat 16:4).

Spiritual adultery is meant: idolatry and apostasy (Mat 16:4).

Clarke: Isa 57:1 - -- The righteous perisheth - הצדק אבד hatstsadik abad . There is an emphasis here which seems intended to point out a particular person. See b...

The righteous perisheth - הצדק אבד hatstsadik abad . There is an emphasis here which seems intended to point out a particular person. See below. Perisheth - As the root אבד abad signifies the straying of cattle, their passing away from one pasture to another, I feel inclined to follow the grammatical meaning of the word "perish," pereo . So the Vulgate, justus periit , from per , By or Through, and eo , to Go. In his death the righteous man may be said to have passed through life, and to have passed by men, i.e., gone or passed before them into the eternal world. A similar mode of speech is used by our Saxon ancestors to express death: he went out of sight; and he went away; and to fare forth, to die

There are very few places in Isaiah where Jesus Christ is not intended; and I am inclined to think that He is intended here, That Just One; and perhaps Stephen had this place in view, when he thus charged the Jews, "Ye denied τον ἁγιον και δικαιον, that Holy and Just One,"Act 3:14. That his death was not laid to heart by the wicked Jewish people, needs no proof

Clarke: Isa 57:1 - -- Merciful men - If the first refers to Christ, this may well refer to the apostles. and to others of the primitive Christians, who were taken away, s...

Merciful men - If the first refers to Christ, this may well refer to the apostles. and to others of the primitive Christians, who were taken away, some by death and martyrdom, and others by a providential escape from the city that they knew was devoted to destruction

Clarke: Isa 57:1 - -- The evil to come - That destruction which was to come upon this disobedient people by the Romans.

The evil to come - That destruction which was to come upon this disobedient people by the Romans.

Clarke: Isa 57:2 - -- He shalt enter into peace "He shall go in peace"- יבוא שלום yabo shalom ; the expression is elliptical, such as the prophet frequently use...

He shalt enter into peace "He shall go in peace"- יבוא שלום yabo shalom ; the expression is elliptical, such as the prophet frequently uses. The same sense is expressed at large and in full terms, Gen 15:15 : ואתה תבא אל אבותיך בשלום veattah libbo al abotheycha beshalom , "and thou shalt go to thy fathers in peace.

They shall rest in their beds, each one walking in his uprightness "He shall rest in his bed; even the perfect man"- This obscure sentence is reduced to a perfectly good sense, and easy construction by an ingenious remark of Dr. Durell. He reads ינוח על משכבו תם yanuach al mishcabo tam , "the perfect man shall rest in his bed."Two MSS. (one of them ancient) have ינוח yanuach , singular; and so the Vulgate renders it, requiescat, "he shall rest."The verb was probably altered to make it plural, and so consistent with what follows after the mistake had been made in the following words, by uniting משכבו mishcabo and תם tam into one word. See Merrick’ s Annotations on the Psalms, Addenda; where the reader will find that J. S. Moerlius, by the same sort of correction, and by rescuing the adjective תם tam , which had been swallowed up in another word in the same manner, has restored to a clear sense a passage before absolutely unintelligible: -

lemo chartsubboth ein ki
   
: אולם ובריא תם
ulam ubari tham

"For no distresses happen to them

Perfect and firm is their strength.

Psa 73:4

To follow on my application of this to our Lord: - He, the Just One, shall enter into peace - the peaceable, prosperous possession of the glorious mediatorial kingdom. They shall rest upon their beds - the hand of wrong and oppression can reach these persecuted followers of Christ no more. (But see below.) The perfect man walking in his uprightness. This may be considered as a general declaration. The separated spirit, though disunited from its body walking in conscious existence in the paradise of God, reaping the fruit of righteousness. The word which we render their beds, משכבותם mishkebotham , the learned bishop supposes to be two words; and to be compounded of משכבו mishkabo , his bed, and תם tam , the upright or perfect man. This is the reading both of the Syriac and Vulgate, and it is favored by the Chaldee: and one of De Rossi’ s MS. has משכבו mishkabo , his bed, without the word תם tam , which has been added by a later hand. Bishop Lowth, as we have seen, adopts this separation of the word and for ינוחו yanuchu , they shall rest, reads ינוה yanuach , he shall rest, which is supported by two of Dr. Kennicott’ s MSS., and by the Vulgate, Septuagint, and Arabic. The word תם tam , taken from משכבותם mishkebotham , should begin the latter clause of the verse; and then the interpolated words, each one, which our translators supplied, may be very well spared. The verse may be then read and paraphrased thus; -

He shall enter into peace: he shall rest upon his bed

The perfect man walking in his uprightness

The bed must signify the grave; the walking in uprightness after death, the conscious existence of the happy spirit, and its eternal progression in happiness and perfection: נכחו nechocho , straight before him; proceeding into the unlimited extent of eternal glory, increasing in happiness, and increasing in perfection

My old MS. Bible translates very nervously: -

The rigtwise man perishith

And there is not that bethinke in his herte

And men of mercy ben gedrid

For there is not that understonde

From the face of malice

Gedreid is the rigtwise

Cumm pese: reste it in his be

That geede in his rigt rewlinge

It has been often remarked that, previously to the execution of God’ s judgments upon a wicked place, he has removed good men from it, that they might not suffer with the wicked. When great and good men are removed by death, or otherwise, from any place, the remaining inhabitants have much cause to tremble.

Calvin: Isa 57:1 - -- 1.The righteous man hath perished Isaiah continues his subject; for, after having shown how fearlessly hypocrites indulge in their luxuries, and with...

1.The righteous man hath perished Isaiah continues his subject; for, after having shown how fearlessly hypocrites indulge in their luxuries, and with what impudence they despise the word of God, he likewise complains that they do not consider the works of God. We have been placed here, as in a spacious theater, to behold the works of God; and there is no work of God so small that we ought to pass by it; lightly, but all ought to be carefully and diligently observed.

And no man layeth it to heart The Lord holds out as a mirror this event of his providence, more remarkable than all others, that he takes away good and worthy men out of this life, when he determines to chastise his people severely. But no man considers it, or reflects that it is a token of approaching destruction, that God gathers them, and places them in safety from being distressed by prevailing afflictions. The general meaning is, that wicked men grievously deceive themselves by supposing that there is no greater happiness than to have life continued to a great age, and by thus pluming themselves on their superiority to the servants of God, who die early. Being attached to the world, they likewise harden themselves by this pretense, that, by nothing else than a manifestation of God’s favor towards them, while others die, they continue to be safe and sound.

Men of mercy are gathered If by “men of mercy” be meant kind or tender-hearted men, this description ought to be carefully studied, by which the Prophet shows what is the true righteousness of the children of God; for hypocrites reckon this to be of no value. But nothing is more acceptable to God than kindness, by which we give evidence of our righteousness, and manifest that our heart is free from all hypocrisy. Yet we may with equal propriety take the phrase “men of mercy” in a passive sense, as meaning those whom the Lord has embraced by his mercy; for it is a phrase of frequent occurrence in Hebrew writings. Nor will it be inappropriate to suppose that there is an implied contrast between the grace of God and the wicked and unfavorable judgments of men; for they are wont to look on those persons as condemned who are taken away in the flower of their age. But, since God, in many passages of Scripture, represents gentleness and kindness as a distinguishing mark of his children, this may be, as I have said, a definition of true righteousness.

Hence we see that the Lord, at that time, gathered many good men, whose death portended some dreadful calamity, and yet that the Jews paid no regard to such forewarnings, and even proceeded to more daring lengths of wickedness; for they thought that all went well with them, when they were the survivors of many excellent men. This doctrine is highly appropriate to every age. It frequently happens that God takes good men out of this world, when he intends to punish severely the iniquities of the ungodly; for the Lord, having a peculiar regard to his own people, takes compassion upon them, and, as it were, snatches them from the burning, that even survivors may perceive in it the wrath of God. And yet this is not an invariable rule; for righteous men are frequently involved, along with the reprobate, in temporal punishments; but it is so frequent that it rarely happens otherwise. 105

In our own times a remarkable instance of this was given in the death of Luther, who was snatched from the world a short time before that terrible calamity befell Germany, which he had foretold many years before, when he exclaimed loudly against that contempt of the Gospel, and that wickedness and licentiousness which everywhere prevailed. Frequently had he entreated the Lord to call him out of this life before he beheld that dreadful punishment, the anticipation of which filled him with trembling and horror. And he obtained it from the Lord. Soon after his death, lo, a sudden and unforeseen war sprang up, by which Germany was terribly afflicted, when nothing was farther from her thoughts than the dread of such a calamity.

Instances of this kind occur every day; and if men observed them, they would not so heedlessly flatter themselves and their vices. But I thought it right to take special notice of this event, both because it happened lately, 106 and because in so distinguished a preacher of the Gospel and prophet of God it must be more clearly seen. We ought, therefore, to consider diligently the worlds of the Lord, both in the life and in the death of “the righteous,” but especially in their death, by which the Lord calls them away to a better life, that they may be rescued from those afflictions in which the wicked must be plunged.

Calvin: Isa 57:2 - -- 2.Peace shall come The Prophet describes what shall be the condition of believers in death; for the wicked, who think that there is no life but the p...

2.Peace shall come The Prophet describes what shall be the condition of believers in death; for the wicked, who think that there is no life but the present, imagine that good men have perished; because in death they see nothing but ruin. For this reason he says that “Peace shall come,” which is more desirable than a thousand lives full of trouble; as if he compared them to discharged soldiers, who are and allowed to enjoy case and quietness.

They shall rest in their beds He adds the metaphor of sleep, in order to show that they shall be absolutely free from all the uneasiness of cares, just as if they were safely pleasantly asleep “on their beds.”

Whosoever walketh before him 107 I do not think that the verb “walketh” is connected with שלום , ( shalom,) “peace,” as some do, who suppose the meaning to be this, that peace shall go before believers, so as to be, as it were, the guide of their life. But I am of opinion that believers, on the contrary, are described by it; as if he had said, “Whosoever walketh before God shall enjoy peace.” Thus, when righteous men die, and their various labors are finished, and their course is ended, they are called to peace and repose. They “rest in their beds,” because they do not yet enjoy perfect blessedness and glory; but they wail; for the last day of the resurrection, when everything shall be perfectly restored; and that, I think, is what Isaiah meant.

It will be said, “Do not righteous men enjoy this peace while they live?” for the fruit of faith is, that; “in patience we may possess our souls.” (Luk 21:19) Although faith produces peace in our hearts, (Rom 5:3) yet we are tossed about by various storms and tempests; and never in life are we so calm and peaceful as when the Lord takes us to himself. Peaceful and calm, therefore, is the death of the righteous, (Psa 116:15) for it is “precious in the sight of God;” but stormy is the death of the wicked. 108 Hence also we may learn that souls are immortal; for if souls had no feeling, (as some fanatics have dreamed,) they could not enjoy “peace.” Thus they enjoy peace and repose, because they live in Christ.

Calvin: Isa 57:3 - -- 3. And draw near, ye sons of the sorceress. After having spoken of the happy and peaceful death of good men, he breaks out with very great vehemence...

3. And draw near, ye sons of the sorceress. After having spoken of the happy and peaceful death of good men, he breaks out with very great vehemence against the wicked, who did not cease to lead a base and shameful life, and were not moved by the death of believers. As he had said that good men enjoy peace, so he threatens that the wicked shall have ceaseless war. He taught that to the holy servants of God death shall even be like a hiding-place, to shelter them from the whirlwind, and storm, and other tempests, that he might threaten the worst of evils against the obstinate despisers of God. Here we ought to observe the contrast, between good men who walk before God, and the wicked, who cease not rebelliously to resist God. The former shall enjoy peace when they die; the latter shall have no peace during life, and shall feel dreadful torments in death.

He orders them to come forth to the judgment­seat of God, which they hope that they will be able to escape by their disguises; and therefore he affirms that they gain nothing by their refusal, for they shall be dragged against their will. The more hardened they were, the sharper were the excitements that must be applied to them; and therefore the harshness of the Prophet could not be excessive, either in arousing their stupidity, or in casting down their pride. And indeed it is well known how insolent was the vanity of the Jews on account of their genealogy; for which reason the prophets frequently beat down their haughtiness and pride, and affirmed that they were not the children of Abraham, because they were bastards and traitors.

On this account Isaiah calls them “the seed of the adulterous and the whore.” In like manner Ezekiel reproaches them, “Thy father is an Amorite; thy mother a Hittite.” (Eze 16:3) Similar forms of expression are found ill many parts of Scripture. Thus he beats down their intolerable hardihood, and drags them forward unwillingly and reluctantly, that they might not think that they could escape the judgment­seat of God.

TSK: Isa 57:1 - -- righteous : 2Ch 32:33, 2Ch 35:24 no man : Isa 57:11, Isa 42:25, Isa 47:7; Mal 2:2 merciful men : Heb. men of kindness, or godliness, Psa 12:1; Mic 7:2...

righteous : 2Ch 32:33, 2Ch 35:24

no man : Isa 57:11, Isa 42:25, Isa 47:7; Mal 2:2

merciful men : Heb. men of kindness, or godliness, Psa 12:1; Mic 7:2

the righteous : 1Ki 14:13; 2Ki 22:20; 2Ch 34:28

the evil to come : or, that which is evil

TSK: Isa 57:2 - -- He shall : Job 3:17; Ecc 12:7; Mat 25:21; Luk 16:22; 2Co 5:1, 2Co 5:8; Phi 1:23; Rev 14:13 enter into : or, go in, Luk 2:29, Luk 7:50 rest : Isa 14:18...

He shall : Job 3:17; Ecc 12:7; Mat 25:21; Luk 16:22; 2Co 5:1, 2Co 5:8; Phi 1:23; Rev 14:13

enter into : or, go in, Luk 2:29, Luk 7:50

rest : Isa 14:18; 2Ch 16:14; Eze 32:25

in his uprightness : or before him, Gen 17:1; Luk 1:6

TSK: Isa 57:3 - -- draw : Isa 45:20; Joe 3:9-11 sons : Gen 3:15; Hos 1:2; Mat 3:7, Mat 12:34, Mat 16:4, Mat 23:33; Luk 3:7; Joh 8:40-44; Jam 4:4; 1Jo 3:10; Rev 17:1-5

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Isa 57:1 - -- The righteous perisheth - This refers, as I suppose, to the time of Manasseh (see the Introduction, Section 3). Grotius supposes, that it refer...

The righteous perisheth - This refers, as I suppose, to the time of Manasseh (see the Introduction, Section 3). Grotius supposes, that it refers to king Josiah; Vitringa, that it refers to martyrs in general. But it seems probable to me that the prophet designs to describe the state of stupidity which prevailed in his own time, and to urge as one proof of it, that the pious part of the nation was taken away by violent death, and that the nation was not affected by it. Such was the guilt of Manasseh; so violent was the persecution which he excited against the just, that it is said of him that he ‘ shed innocent blood very much, until he had filled Jerusalem from one end to another’ 2Ki 22:16. There is evidence (see the Introduction, Section 2), that Isaiah lived to his time, and it is probable that he himself ultimately fell a victim to the race of Manasseh. Though he had, on account of his great age, retired from the public functions of the prophetic office, yet he could not be insensible to the existence of these evils, and his spirit would not suffer him to be silent even though bowed down by age, when the land was filled with abominations, and when the best blood of the nation was poured out like water. The word rendered ‘ perisheth’ ( אבד 'ābad ) as well as the word rendered ‘ taken away’ ( אסף 'âsaph ) denotes violence, and is indicative of the fact that they were removed by a premature death.

And no man layeth it to heart - No one is aroused by it, or is concerned about it. The sentiment of the passage is, that it is proof of great stupidity and guilt when people see the righteous die without concern. If the pious die by persecution and others are not aroused, it shows that they acquiesce in it, or have no confidence in God, and no desire that his people should be preserved; if they die in the ordinary mode and the people are unaffected, it shows their stupidity. The withdrawment of a pious man from the earth is a public calamity. His prayers, his example, his life, were among the richest blessings of the world, and people should be deeply affected when they are withdrawn; and it shows their guilt and stupidity when they see this with indifference. It increases the evidence of this guilt when, as is sometimes the case, the removal of the righteous by death is an occasion of joy. The wicked hate the secret rebuke which is furnished by a holy life, and they often feel a secret exultation when such people die.

And merciful men - Margin, ‘ Men of kindness,’ or ‘ godliness.’ Lowth and Noyes render it, ‘ Pious men.’ The Septuagint, Ἄνδρες δίκαιοι Andres dikaioi - ‘ Just men.’ The Hebrew word denotes "mercy"or "kindness"( חסד chesed ). Here it probably means, ‘ Men of mercy;’ that is, people who are the subjects of mercy; people who are pious, or devoted to God.

Are taken away - Hebrew, ‘ Are gathered.’ That is, they are gathered to their fathers by death.

None considering - They were not anxious to know what was the design of Divine Providence in permitting it.

From the evil to come - Margin, ‘ That which is evil.’ The idea here evidently is, that severe calamities were coming upon the nation. God was about to give them up to foreign invasion (Isa 56:9 ff); and the true reason why the just were removed was, that they may not be subject to the divine wrath which should come upon the nation; they were not to be required to contemplate the painful state of things when an enemy should fire the cities, the palaces, and the temple, and cause the sacred services of religion to cease. It was a less evil for them to be removed by death - even by the painful death of persecution - than to be compelled to participate in these coming sorrows. At the same time this passage may be regarded as inculcating a more general truth still. It is, that the pious are often removed in order that they may not be exposed to evils which they would experience should they live. There might be the pains and sorrows of persecution; there might be long and lingering disease; there might be poverty and want; there might be the prevalence of iniquity and infidelity over which their hearts would bleed; there might be long and painful conflicts with their own evil hearts, or there might be danger that they would fall into sin, and dishonor their high calling. For some or all these reasons the righteous may be withdrawn from the world; and could we see those reasons as God does, nothing more would be necessary to induce us to acquiesce entirely in the justice of his dealings.

Barnes: Isa 57:2 - -- He shall enter into peace - Lowth, ‘ He shall go in peace.’ So the margin. Vulgate, ‘ Peace shall come.’ Septuagint, R...

He shall enter into peace - Lowth, ‘ He shall go in peace.’ So the margin. Vulgate, ‘ Peace shall come.’ Septuagint, ‘ His sepulture ( ἡ ταφὴ αὐτοῦ hē taphē autou ) shall be in peace.’ The idea is, that by his death the righteous man shall enter into rest. He shall get away from conflict, strife, agitation, and distress. This may either refer to the peaceful rest of the grave, or to that which awaits the just in a better world. The direct meaning here intended is probably the former, since the grave is often spoken of as a place of rest. Thus Job Job 3:17, speaking of the grave, says:

There the wicked cease from troubling; And there the weary be at rest.

The connection here seems also to demand the same sense, as it is immediately added, ‘ they shall rest in their beds.’ The grave is a place of peace:

Nor pain, nor grief, nor anxious fear,

Invade thy bounds; no mortal woes

Can reach the peaceful sleeper here,

While angels watch the soft repose.

- Watts

At the same time it is true that the dying saint ‘ goes in peace!’ He has calmness in his dying, as well as peace in his grave. He forgives all who have injured him; prays for all who have persecuted him; and peacefully and calmly dies. He lies in a peaceful grave - often represented in the Scriptures as a place of repose, where the righteous ‘ sleep’ in the hope of being awakened in the morning of the resurrection. He enters into the rest of heaven - the world of perfect and eternal repose. No persecution comes there; no trial awaits him there; no calamity shall meet him there. Thus, in all respects, the righteous leave the world in peace; and thus death ceases to be a calamity, and this most dreaded of all evils is turned into the highest blessing.

They shall rest in their beds - That is, in their graves.

Each one walking in his uprightness - Margin, ‘ Before him.’ The word נכח nakkoch means "straight, right,"and is used of one who walks straight forward. It here means an upright man, who is often represented as walking in a straight path in opposition to sinners, who are represented as walking in crooked ways Psa 125:5; Pro 2:15; Isa 59:8; Phi 2:15. The sense here is, that all who are upright shall leave the world in peace, and rest quietly in their graves.

Barnes: Isa 57:3 - -- But draw near hither - That is, come near to hear the solemn sentence which God pronounces in regard to your character and doom. This is addres...

But draw near hither - That is, come near to hear the solemn sentence which God pronounces in regard to your character and doom. This is addressed to the impenitent and unbelieving part of the nation, and is designed to set before them the greatness of their sin, and the certainty that they would be punished.

Ye sons of the sorceress - You who are addicted to sorcery and enchantments; who consult the oracles of the pagan rather than the only true God. On the meaning of the word used here, see the notes at Isa 2:6. The Hebrews, like other inhabitants of the East, were much addicted to this, and particularly in the time of Manasseh 2Ki 21:6 : ‘ And he made his sons pass through the fire, and observed times, and used enchantments, and dealt with familiar spirits, and wizards.’ So much were they devoted to this in his time, that they might be called, by way of eminence, ‘ the sons of the sorceress;’ as if a sorceress had been their mother, and they had grown up to walk in her steps, and to imitate her example.

The seed of the adulterer - Implying that the obligations of the marriage contract were disregarded, and that licentiousness prevailed in the nation. Amidst the other abominations which existed under the wicked and corrupt reign of Manasseh 2 Kings 21, there is every probability that these sins also abounded. Licentiousness had been the invariable attendant on idol-worship; and dissoluteness of manners is the usual accompaniment of all other crimes. It is observable also that the Saviour often charges the same sin on the nation in his own time (Mat 12:39; Mat 16:4; Joh 8:1 ff.) In the language here, however, there is a reference to the fact that the nation had apostatized from God, and they were guilty of spiritual adultery - that is, of unfaithfulness to God. They fixed their affections on other objects than God, and loved the images of idol-worship more than they did their Creator.

Poole: Isa 57:1 - -- The righteous just and holy men, who are the pillars of the place and state in which they live; yea, as the Jews call them, the pillars of the world...

The righteous just and holy men, who are the pillars of the place and state in which they live; yea, as the Jews call them, the pillars of the world.

No man few or none of the people. So he showeth that the corruption was general, in the people no less than in the priests.

Layeth it to heart is duly affected with this severe stroke and sad sign of God’ s displeasure.

Merciful or, godly ; the same whom he now called righteous , whose duty and practice it is to exercise both mercy or kindness, and justice.

From the evil to come from those dreadful calamities which are coming upon the nation.

Poole: Isa 57:2 - -- He shall enter into peace this just and merciful man shall enter into a state of peace and rest, where he shall be out of the reach of the approachin...

He shall enter into peace this just and merciful man shall enter into a state of peace and rest, where he shall be out of the reach of the approaching miseries. Or, He shall go (to wit, to his fathers , as it is fully expressed, Gen 15:15 ; or, he shall die; going being put for dying , as 1Ch 17:11 , compared with 2Sa 7:12 Job 10:21 14:20 Luk 22:22 , and elsewhere) in peace. They ; just men. Here is a sudden change of the number, which is very frequent in the prophets. In their beds ; in their graves, which are not unfitly called their beds , or sleeping houses, as their death is commonly called sleep in Scripture. Walking ; or, that walketh or did walk , i.e. live. In his uprightness ; in a sincere and faithful discharge of his duties to God and men. Or, before him , i.e. before God, according to the usual phrase of Scripture, as Gen 17:1 1Ki 2:4 8:25 . For God is oft understood where he is not expressed, but only designed by this or the like pronoun, as Gen 15:13 , and elsewhere.

Poole: Isa 57:3 - -- Draw near hither to God’ s tribunal, to answer for yourselves, and to hear what I have to say against you, and to receive your sentence. Sons o...

Draw near hither to God’ s tribunal, to answer for yourselves, and to hear what I have to say against you, and to receive your sentence.

Sons of the sorceress not by propagation, but by imitation; such being frequently called a man or woman’ s sons that learn their art, and follow their example: you sorcerers, either properly or metaphorically so called; for the Jews were guilty of it both ways.

The seed of the adulterer and the whore not the genuine children of Abraham, as you pretend and boast, but begotten in fornication upon a common whore; which is not to be understood properly, but figuratively, because their dispositions and carriages were far more suitable to a bastardly brood than to Abraham’ s seed.

Haydock: Isa 57:1 - -- Afraid, since thou hast despised my, my laws and offers.

Afraid, since thou hast despised my, my laws and offers.

Haydock: Isa 57:1 - -- The just. Christ, (Calmet) Josias, (Grotius) or any whose cause is just, yet finds no protection from such corrupt magistrates. (Haydock) --- Evil...

The just. Christ, (Calmet) Josias, (Grotius) or any whose cause is just, yet finds no protection from such corrupt magistrates. (Haydock) ---

Evil, by the wicked, or to prevent his fall, 4 Kings xii. 20. People little consider what a loss the world sustains, when those die who might have averted the divine wrath. (Calmet) ---

They are usually taken away, that they may not witness such misfortunes, and are settled in eternal peace. (Worthington)

Haydock: Isa 57:2 - -- Bed. The grave which affords rest to the virtuous, Josias, &c. (Calmet)

Bed. The grave which affords rest to the virtuous, Josias, &c. (Calmet)

Haydock: Isa 57:3 - -- Sorceress. Septuagint, "lawless" children. (Haydock)

Sorceress. Septuagint, "lawless" children. (Haydock)

Gill: Isa 57:1 - -- The righteous perisheth,.... Not eternally; he may fear he shall, by reason of sin and temptation; he may say his strength and hope are perished; and ...

The righteous perisheth,.... Not eternally; he may fear he shall, by reason of sin and temptation; he may say his strength and hope are perished; and his peace and comfort may perish for a time; but he cannot perish everlastingly, because he is one that believes in Christ, and is justified by his righteousness, from whence he is denominated righteous; and such shall never perish, but have everlasting life: but the meaning is, that he perisheth as to his outward man, or dies corporeally, which is called perishing, Ecc 7:15 and so the Targum renders it,

"the righteous die.''

Or it may be rendered, "the righteous man is lost" b; not to himself, his death is a gain to him; but to the church, and to the world, which yet is not considered:

and no man layeth it to heart; takes any notice of it, thinks at all about it, far from being concerned or grieved; instead of that, rather rejoice, and are pleased that they are rid of such persons; which will be the case when the witnesses are slain, Rev 11:10. The Targum is,

"and no man lays my fear to heart;''

or on his heart; whereas such providences should lead men to fear the Lord, and seek to him, and serve him, as it did David, Psa 12:1,

and merciful men are taken away; or "gathered" c; out of the world, to their own people, to heaven; these are such who obtain mercy of the Lord, and show mercy to others, holy good men: the former character may respect the righteousness of Christ imputed to them, this his grace implanted in them, discovered by acts of mercy and goodness; for one and the same persons are intended:

none considering that the righteous is taken away from the evil to come; that there are evil times coming, great calamities, and sore judgments upon men; and therefore these righteous ones are gathered out of the world, and are gathered home, and safely housed in heaven, that they may escape the evil coming upon a wicked generation; and who yet have no thought about it, nor are they led to observe it as they might, from the removal of good men out of the world; see 2Ki 22:20. All this may be applied to the martyrs of Jesus in times of Popish persecution; or to the removal of good men by an ordinary death before those times came.

Gill: Isa 57:2 - -- He shall enter into peace,.... Or "shall go in peace" d; the righteous man goes in peace now; he has peace from his justifying righteousness; he has p...

He shall enter into peace,.... Or "shall go in peace" d; the righteous man goes in peace now; he has peace from his justifying righteousness; he has peace through believing in Christ; he has peace in, though not from, his obedience and holiness of life; and he has peace in the midst of the many trials he is exercised with; and he goes out of the world in peace, with great serenity and tranquillity of mind, as Simeon desired he might, having views of an interest in Christ, and in the glories of another world; and as soon as he is departed from hence he enters into peace, into a state where there is everything that makes for peace; there is the God of peace; there is Christ, the Prince of peace; there is the Spirit, whose fruit is peace; and there are the angels of peace, and good men, the sons of peace: and there is nothing there to disturb their peace, no sin within, nor Satan's temptations without, nor any wicked men to annoy and molest them; and there is everything that can come under the notion of peace and prosperity; for the happiness of this state is signified by riches, by glory and honour, by a kingdom, and by a paradise; and into this state the righteous may be said to enter immediately upon death, which is no other than stepping out of one world into another; and this they enter into as into a house, as it really is, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens; and, entering into it, they take possession of it, and for ever enjoy it:

they shall rest in their beds, their souls in the bosom of Abraham, in the arms of Jesus; their bodies in the grave, which is a bed unto them, where they lie down and sleep, till they are awaked at the resurrection; and where they rest from all toil and labour, from all diseases and distempers, pains and tortures, and from all persecuting enemies; see Rev 14:13,

each one walking in his uprightness; in the righteousness of Christ, and in the shining robes of immortality and glory, and in perfect purity and holiness: or, "before him" e; before God, in the sight or presence of him, and by sight, and not by faith, as now. Though this is by some considered as the character of the righteous man in life, so Aben Ezra; and then the sense is, that he that walks in his uprightness, in the uprightness or righteousness of Christ, and by faith on him; that walks uprightly in his life and conversation before God, and "before himself"; following the rule before him, and walking according to the rule of the Gospel, and in the ordinances of it blameless, when he comes to die, he enters into peace and rest. And to this sense is the Targum, which paraphrases it,

"that are doers of his law;''

see Rom 2:13. In the Talmud f it is interpreted of that peace and happiness righteous men enter into when they die.

Gill: Isa 57:3 - -- But draw near hither,.... The death of the righteous, and their happiness after it, being observed: the wicked, who thought themselves safe from dange...

But draw near hither,.... The death of the righteous, and their happiness after it, being observed: the wicked, who thought themselves safe from danger, and the happier that they were rid of the righteous, those witnesses and prophets which had tormented them, and therefore rejoiced on that account, are here summoned to the divine tribunal, to hear their character, and receive their doom, as follows:

ye sons of the sorceress; the children of Jezebel, the witch, and the prophetess that taught the servants of the Lord to commit fornication, and bewitched with her witchcrafts the sons of the apostate church of Rome; by whose sorceries all nations have been deceived, and of which she repents not, Rev 2:20,

the seed of the adulterer and of the whore; of the great whore of Babylon, with whom the kings of the earth have committed fornication; and whose subjects and children are the seed of this whore, and the sons of this idolatrous church: or, "that committeth whoredom" g; which aggravates the character, that they were not only the children of adulterous persons, but committed whoredom themselves.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Isa 57:1 The translation assumes that this verse, in proverbial fashion, laments society’s apathy over the persecution of the godly. The second half of t...

NET Notes: Isa 57:2 Heb “he enters peace, they rest on their beds, the one who walks straight ahead of himself.” The tomb is here viewed in a fairly positive ...

NET Notes: Isa 57:3 The Hebrew text reads literally, “offspring of an adulterer [masculine] and [one who] has committed adultery.” Perhaps the text has suffer...

Geneva Bible: Isa 57:1 The righteous perisheth, and no man layeth [it] to heart: and merciful men [are] taken away, none considering that the righteous is taken away ( a ) f...

Geneva Bible: Isa 57:2 ( b ) He shall enter into peace: they shall rest in their beds, [each one] walking [in] his uprightness. ( b ) The soul of the righteous will be in j...

Geneva Bible: Isa 57:3 But draw near here, ye ( c ) sons of the sorceress, the seed of the adulterer and the harlot. ( c ) He threatens the wicked hypocrites, who under the...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Isa 57:1-21 - --1 The blessed death of the righteous.3 God reproves the Jews for their whorish idolatry.13 He gives promises of mercy to the penitent.

MHCC: Isa 57:1-2 - --The righteous are delivered from the sting of death, not from the stroke of it. The careless world disregards this. Few lament it as a public loss, an...

MHCC: Isa 57:3-12 - --The Lord here calls apostates and hypocrites to appear before him. When reproved for their sins, and threatened with judgments, they ridiculed the wor...

Matthew Henry: Isa 57:1-2 - -- The prophet, in the close of the foregoing chapter, had condemned the watchmen for their ignorance and sottishness; here he shows the general stupid...

Matthew Henry: Isa 57:3-12 - -- We have here a high charge, but a just one no doubt, drawn up against that wicked generation out of which God's righteous ones were removed, because...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 57:1-2 - -- Whilst watchmen and shepherds, prophets and rulers, without troubling themselves about the flock which they have to watch and feed, are thus indulgi...

Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 57:3-4 - -- The reproachful language of the prophet is now directed against the mass of the nation, who have occasioned the "evil"from which the righteous is sw...

Constable: Isa 56:1--66:24 - --V. Israel's future transformation chs. 56--66 The last major section of Isaiah deals with the necessity of livin...

Constable: Isa 56:1--59:21 - --A. Recognition of human inability chs. 56-59 It is important that God's people demonstrate righteousness...

Constable: Isa 56:1--57:21 - --1. The need for humility and holiness chs. 56-57 These chapters introduce the main subject of th...

Constable: Isa 56:9--57:14 - --The basis of rejection and cursing 56:9-57:13 Whereas heartfelt love for and trust in th...

Constable: Isa 56:9--57:3 - --Wicked leadership 56:9-57:2 The leaders of Israel were responsible for the peoples' failure to appreciate the difference between a real relationship w...

Constable: Isa 57:3-13 - --Rampant apostasy 57:3-13 Isaiah identified another mark of Israel, which boasted in its election by God and viewed righteousness in terms of correct w...

Guzik: Isa 57:1-21 - --Isaiah 57 - The Spiritual Adultery of God's People A. Judah's idolatry is like spiritual adultery. 1. (1-2) The persecution of the righteous. The ...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Isaiah (Book Introduction) ISAIAH, son of Amoz (not Amos); contemporary of Jonah, Amos, Hosea, in Israel, but younger than they; and of Micah, in Judah. His call to a higher deg...

JFB: Isaiah (Outline) PARABLE OF JEHOVAH'S VINEYARD. (Isa. 5:1-30) SIX DISTINCT WOES AGAINST CRIMES. (Isa. 5:8-23) (Lev 25:13; Mic 2:2). The jubilee restoration of posses...

TSK: Isaiah (Book Introduction) Isaiah has, with singular propriety, been denominated the Evangelical Prophet, on account of the number and variety of his prophecies concerning the a...

TSK: Isaiah 57 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Isa 57:1, The blessed death of the righteous; Isa 57:3, God reproves the Jews for their whorish idolatry; Isa 57:13, He gives promises of...

Poole: Isaiah (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT THE teachers of the ancient church were of two sorts: 1. Ordinary, the priests and Levites. 2. Extraordinary, the prophets. These we...

Poole: Isaiah 57 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 57 The blessed death of the righteous not duly lamented by the Jews; who also commit idolatry, and trusted in man: they are threatened, Isa...

MHCC: Isaiah (Book Introduction) Isaiah prophesied in the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. He has been well called the evangelical prophet, on account of his numerous and...

MHCC: Isaiah 57 (Chapter Introduction) (Isa 57:1, Isa 57:2) The blessed death of the righteous. (Isa 57:3-12) The abominable idolatries of the Jewish nation. (Isa 57:13-21) Promises to th...

Matthew Henry: Isaiah (Book Introduction) An Exposition, With Practical Observations, of The Book of the Prophet Isaiah Prophet is a title that sounds very great to those that understand it, t...

Matthew Henry: Isaiah 57 (Chapter Introduction) The prophet, in this chapter, makes his observations, I. Upon the deaths of good men, comforting those that were taken away in their integrity and...

Constable: Isaiah (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and writer The title of this book of the Bible, as is true of the o...

Constable: Isaiah (Outline) Outline I. Introduction chs. 1-5 A. Israel's condition and God's solution ch. 1 ...

Constable: Isaiah Isaiah Bibliography Alexander, Joseph Addison. Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah. 1846, 1847. Revised ed. ...

Haydock: Isaiah (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF ISAIAS. INTRODUCTION. This inspired writer is called by the Holy Ghost, (Ecclesiasticus xlviii. 25.) the great prophet; from t...

Gill: Isaiah (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH This book is called, in the New Testament, sometimes "the Book of the Words of the Prophet Esaias", Luk 3:4 sometimes only t...

Gill: Isaiah 57 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH 57 This chapter contains complaints of the stupidity and idolatry of the people, described in the latter part of the precedi...

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