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Text -- Isaiah 47:15 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Such comfortless and helpless creatures.
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Wesley: Isa 47:15 - -- Merchants who came from several countries to trade with Babylon. And the verse may be thus rendered; Thus (vain and unprofitable) shall they (thy sorc...
Merchants who came from several countries to trade with Babylon. And the verse may be thus rendered; Thus (vain and unprofitable) shall they (thy sorcerers) with whom thou hast laboured be unto thee: (So here is only a transposition of words, than which nothing is more usual in scripture. Then follows another matter:) also thy merchants, or they with whom thou hast traded from thy youth, shall wander every one to his own quarter.
JFB: Isa 47:15 - -- Such shall be the fate of those astrologers who cost thee such an amount of trouble and money.
Such shall be the fate of those astrologers who cost thee such an amount of trouble and money.
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JFB: Isa 47:15 - -- That is, with whom thou hast trafficked from thy earliest history, the foreigners sojourning in Babylon for the sake of commerce (Isa 13:14; Jer 51:6,...
That is, with whom thou hast trafficked from thy earliest history, the foreigners sojourning in Babylon for the sake of commerce (Isa 13:14; Jer 51:6, Jer 51:9; Nah 3:16-17) [BARNES]. Rather, the astrologers, with whom Babylon had so many dealings (Isa 47:12-14) [HORSLEY].
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JFB: Isa 47:15 - -- Literally, "straight before him" (Eze 1:9, {ul Eze_1:12). The foreigners, whether soothsayers or merchants, shall flee home out of Babylon (Jer 50:16)...
Clarke -> Isa 47:15
Clarke: Isa 47:15 - -- To his quarter "To his own business"- לעברו leebro . Expositors give no very good account of this word in this place. In a MS. it was at firs...
To his quarter "To his own business"-
Calvin -> Isa 47:15
Calvin: Isa 47:15 - -- 15.So shal they be to thee After having threatened destruction to those astronomers, he again retums to the Babylonians, and threatens that they must...
15.So shal they be to thee After having threatened destruction to those astronomers, he again retums to the Babylonians, and threatens that they must not look for assistance from that quarter from which they expected it, and that they ought not to rely on those vain counsels, with which they had long and eagerly vexed themselves in vain.
He calls them dealers, or, as we commonly say, traffickers; a metaphor taken from merchants, who are skilled in innumerable arts of deceiving, and in impostures of every kind; for the princes do not consult in a manner suitable to their rank, but traffic in disgraceful transactions. 232 Though we may extend this to all the allies by whom the Babylonians were aided, yet the Prophet has his eye chiefly on the diviners. When he adds, from thy youth, he aggravates the guilt of Babylon, in having been infected with this foolish belief from an ancient date, and in having held this error as if it had been born with her.
Every one to his own quarter 233 It is supposed that the Prophet here speaks of the flight of the astrologers, that every one shall provide for his own safety; and I fully agree with this, but think that, there is also an allusion to the “quarters” of the heavens, which astrologers divide and measure, so as to deduce their prognostications from them. He therefore ridicules their vain boasting. “They shall withdraw into their quarters, but they shall go astray, and there shall be no means of protection. If any one choose to apply it to the revolt of those whose assistance Babylon thought that at any time she could easily obtain, I have no objection.
TSK -> Isa 47:15
TSK: Isa 47:15 - -- thy merchants : Isa 56:11; Eze 27:12-25; Rev 18:11-19
they shall : Babylon was replenished from all nations, by a concourse of people, whom Jeremiah (...
thy merchants : Isa 56:11; Eze 27:12-25; Rev 18:11-19
they shall : Babylon was replenished from all nations, by a concourse of people, whom Jeremiah (Jer 50:37) calls ""the mingled people.""All these, at the approach of Cyrus, sought to escape to their several countries. Jer 51:6-9; Rev 18:15-17
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 47:15
Barnes: Isa 47:15 - -- With whom thou hast labored - The multitude of diviners, astrologers, and merchants, with whom thou hast been connected and employed. The idea ...
With whom thou hast labored - The multitude of diviners, astrologers, and merchants, with whom thou hast been connected and employed. The idea is, that Babylon had been the mart where all of them had been assembled.
Even thy merchants from thy youth - Babylon was favorably situated for traffic; and was distinguished for it. Foreigners and strangers had resorted there, and it was filled with those who had come there for purposes of trade. The sense here is, that the same destruction which would come upon the diviners, would come on all who had been engaged there in traffic and merchandise. It does not mean that the individuals who were thus engaged would be destroyed, but that destruction would come upon the business; it would come in spite of all the efforts of the astrologers, and in spite of all the mercantile advantages of the place. The destruction would be as entire as if a fire should pass over stubble, and leave not a coal or a spark. What a striking description of the total ruin of the commercial advantages of Babylon!
From thy youth - From the very foundation of the city.
They shall wander every one to his own quarter - All shall leave Babylon, and it shall be utterly forsaken as a place of commerce, and all who have been engaged in mercantile transactions there shall go to other places. The phrase, ‘ his own quarter’ (
None shall save thee - How truly this was fulfilled need not here be stated. All its arts of astrology, its wealth, its mercantile advantages, the strength of its walls and gates, were insufficient to save it, and now it lies a wide waste - a scene of vast and doleful ruin (see the notes at Isa. 13; 14) So certainly will all the predictions of God be accomplished; so vain are the arts and devices of man, the strength of fortifications, and the advantages for commerce, when God purposes to inflict his vengeance on a guilty nation. The skill of astrology, the advantages of science, accumulated treasures, brass gates and massive walls, and commercial advantages, the influx of foreigners, and a fertile soil, cannot save it. All these things are in the hands of God; and he can withdraw them when he pleases. Babylon once had advantages for commerce equal to most of the celebrated marts now of Europe and America. So had Palmyra, and Tyre, and Baalbec, and Petra, and Alexandria, and Antioch. Babylon was in the midst of a country as fertile by nature as most parts of the United States. She had as little prospect of losing the commerce of the world, and of ceasing to be a place of wealth and power, as Paris, or London, or Liverpool, or New York. Yet how easy was it for God, in the accomplishment of his plans, to turn away the tide of her prosperity, and reduce her to ruins.
How easy, in the arrangements of his providence, to spread desolation over all the once fertile plains of Chaldea, and to make those plains pools of water. And so with equal ease, if he pleases, and by causes as little known as were those which destroyed Babylon, can he take away the commercial advantages of any city now on earth. Tyre has lost all its commercial importance; the richly-laden caravan has ceascd to pause at Petra; Tadmor lies waste. Baalbec is known only by the far-strewed ruins, and Nineveh and Babylon are stripped of all. that ever made them great, and can rise no more. God has taken away the importance and the power of Rome, once, like Babylon, the mistress of the world, by suffering the malaria to desolate all the region in her vicinity; and so with equal truth, all that contributes to the commercial importance of New York, Philadelphia, Boston, London, or Paris, are under the control of God. By some secret causes he could make these cities a wide scene of ruins; and they may be, if they are like Babylon and Tyre and Tadmor in their character, yet like them in their doom. They should feel that the sources of their prosperity and their preservation are not in themselves, but in the favor and protection of God. Virtue, justice, and piety, will better preserve them than wealth; and without these they must be, in spite of their commercial advantages, what the once celebrated cities of antiquity now are.
Poole -> Isa 47:15
Poole: Isa 47:15 - -- Thus , such comfortless and helpless creatures, shall they be; either,
1. Thy merchants, as it follows, with whom thou hast trafficked. Or,
2. Th...
Thus , such comfortless and helpless creatures, shall they be; either,
1. Thy merchants, as it follows, with whom thou hast trafficked. Or,
2. Thy sorcerers, astrologers, &c., with whom they are said to have laboured , both here and Isa 47:12 , who also may possibly be called their merchants , because they traded so much with them, and because of their deceitful practices; for which Ephraim is called a merchant , Hos 12:7 . And so the following clause may be rendered, who have been
thy merchants from thy youth Or the last clause may be understood of merchants, properly so called, who came from several countries to trade with Babylon, as is noted in Scripture, and by other authors; and the verse may be thus rendered; Thus (vain and unprofitable) shall they (thy sorcerers, &c.) with whom thou hast laboured be unto thee : (so here is only a transposition of words, than which nothing is more usual in Scripture. Then follows another matter in the next clause:) also
thy merchants or they with whom thou hast traded from thy youth, shall wander every one to his own quarter. None shall save thee ; they shall all leave thee, and flee away with all possible speed to their several countries and habitations.
Haydock -> Isa 47:15
Haydock: Isa 47:15 - -- Merchants. The city was well situated for trade, chap. xiii. 20. (Diodorus ii.)
Merchants. The city was well situated for trade, chap. xiii. 20. (Diodorus ii.)
Gill -> Isa 47:15
Gill: Isa 47:15 - -- Thus shall they be unto thee with whom thou hast laboured,.... In training them up in those arts, and in consulting with them in cases of difficulty; ...
Thus shall they be unto thee with whom thou hast laboured,.... In training them up in those arts, and in consulting with them in cases of difficulty; in which they were of no service, and now in time of danger as useless as stubble, or a blaze of straw:
even thy merchants from thy youth; either the above astrologers and diviners, who had been with them from the beginning of their state; and who had made merchandise of them, and were become rich as merchants by telling fortunes, and predicting things to come by the stars; which sense our version leads to by supplying the word "even"; or rather merchants in a literal sense, which Babylon abounded with from the first building of it; it being the metropolis of the empire, and the mart of nations: these, upon the destruction of the city,
shall wander everyone to his quarter, or "passage" y; to the country from whence they came, and to the passage in that part of the city which led unto it; or to the passage over the river Euphrates, which ran through the city; or to the next port, from whence they might have a passage by shipping to their own land: it denotes the fright and fugitive state in which merchants, from other countries, should be in, when this calamity should come upon Babylon; that they should leave their effects, flee for their lives, and wander about till they got a passage over to their native place, and be of no service to the Chaldeans, as follows:
none shall save thee: neither astrologers nor merchants; so the merchants of mystical Babylon will get without the city, and stand afar off, and lament her sad case, but will not be able to help her, Rev 18:15.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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TSK Synopsis -> Isa 47:1-15
TSK Synopsis: Isa 47:1-15 - --1 God's judgment upon Babylon and Chaldea,6 for their unmercifulness,7 pride,10 and overboldness,11 shall be irresistible.
MHCC -> Isa 47:7-15
MHCC: Isa 47:7-15 - --Let us beware of acting and speaking as Babylon did; of trusting in tyranny and oppression; of boasting as to our abilities, relying on ourselves, and...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 47:7-15
Matthew Henry: Isa 47:7-15 - -- Babylon, now doomed to ruin, is here justly upbraided with her pride, luxury, and security, in the day of her prosperity, and the confidence she had...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 47:12-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 47:12-15 - --
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