
Text -- Isaiah 57:2 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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.
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,...

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...

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.
Clarke -> Isa 57:2
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"-
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
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"For no distresses happen to them
Perfect and firm is their strength.
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,
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:
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 57:2
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
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.
TSK -> Isa 57:2
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...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 57:2
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 (
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
Poole -> Isa 57:2
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.
Haydock -> Isa 57:2
Bed. The grave which affords rest to the virtuous, Josias, &c. (Calmet)
Gill -> Isa 57:2
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.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Isa 57:2
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 ...
Geneva Bible -> Isa 57:2
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...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 57:1-21
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
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...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 57:1-2
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...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 57:1-2
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...
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...
