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Text -- Isaiah 5:9 (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 5:9
I heard God speak what I am about to utter.
Namely, has revealed it, as in Isa 22:14.
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Literally, "a desolation," namely, on account of the national sins.
Clarke -> Isa 5:9
Clarke: Isa 5:9 - -- In mine ears. "To mine ear"- The sentence in the Hebrew text seems to be imperfect in this place; as likewise in Isa 22:14 (note), where the very sa...
In mine ears. "To mine ear"- The sentence in the Hebrew text seems to be imperfect in this place; as likewise in Isa 22:14 (note), where the very same sense seems to be required as here. See the note there; and compare 1Sa 9:15 (note). In this place the Septuagint supply the word
Many houses - This has reference to what was said in the preceding verse: "In vain are ye so intent upon joining house to house, and field to field; your houses shall be left uninhabited, and your fields shall become desolate and barren; so that a vineyard of ten acres shall produce but one bath (not eight gallons) of wine, and the husbandman shall reap but a tenth part of the seed which he has sown."Kimchi says this means such an extent of vineyard as would require ten yoke of oxen to plough in one day.
Calvin -> Isa 5:9
Calvin: Isa 5:9 - -- 9.This is in the ears of Jehovah of hosts Here something must be supplied; for he means that the Lord sits as judge, and as taking cognizance of thos...
9.This is in the ears of Jehovah of hosts Here something must be supplied; for he means that the Lord sits as judge, and as taking cognizance of those things. When covetous men seize and heap up their wealth, they are blinded by their desire of gain, and do not understand that they will one day render an account. Never, certainly, were men so utterly stupid as not to ascribe some judgment to God; but they flatter themselves so far as to imagine that God does not observe them. In general, therefore, they acknowledge the judgment of God: when they come to particular cases, they take liberties, and suppose that they are not bound to proceed to that extent.
If many houses be not laid desolate Having warned them that none of these things escape the eyes of God, lest they should imagine that it is a knowledge which does not lead to action, he immediately adds, that vengeance is close at hand. He likewise makes use of an oath; for the expression If not is a form of swearing that frequently occurs in the Scriptures. 80 In order to strike them with greater terror he breaks off the sentence with studied abruptness. 81 He might indeed have brought out this threatening with full expression, but the incomplete form is better fitted to keep the hearer in doubt and suspense, and is therefore more alarming. Besides, by this instance of reserve the Lord intended to train us to modesty, that we may not be too free in the use of oaths.
But what does he threaten? Many houses will be laid desolate. This is a just punishment, by which the Lord chastises the covetousness and ambition of men, who did not consider their own meanness, that they might be satisfied with a moderate portion. In a similar manner the poet ridicules the mad ambition of Alexander the Great, who having learned from the philosophy of Anacharsis that there were many worlds, sighed to think, that after having worn himself out by so many toils, he had not yet made himself master of one world. “One globe does not satisfy the Macedonian youth. He writhes in misery on account of the narrow limits of the world, as if he were confined to the rocks of Gyaros, or to the puny Seriphos. But when he shall enter the city framed by potters, he will be content with a tomb. Death alone acknowledges how small are the dimensions of the bodies of men.” 82
Instances of the same kind occur every day, yet we do not observe them; for the Lord exhibits to us, as in a mirror, the absurd vanity of men, who spend a vast amount of money in building palaces that are afterwards to become the receptacles of owls and bats and other animals. These things are plainly before our eyes, and yet we do not apply our mind to the consideration of them. So sudden and various are the changes that happen, so many houses are laid desolate, so many cities are overthrown and destroyed, and, in short, there are so many other evident proofs of the judgment of God; and yet men cannot be persuaded to lay aside this mad ambition. The Lord threatens by the Prophet Amos:
“You have built houses of hewn stones,
but you shall not dwell in them.” (Amo 5:11.)
And again,
“He will smite the great house with breaches,
and the little house with clefts.” (Amo 6:11.)
These things happen daily, and yet the lawless passions of men are not abated.
TSK -> Isa 5:9
TSK: Isa 5:9 - -- In mine ears, said : or, This is in mine ears, saith, etc. Isa 22:14; Amo 3:7
Of a truth : etc. Heb. If not many houses desolate, etc. desolate. Isa 5...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Isa 5:9
Barnes: Isa 5:9 - -- In mine ears - This probably refers to the prophet. As if he had said, ‘ God has revealed it to me,’ or ‘ God has said in my ea...
In mine ears - This probably refers to the prophet. As if he had said, ‘ God has revealed it to me,’ or ‘ God has said in my ears,’ i. e, to me. The Septuagint reads it, ‘ These things are heard in the ears of the Lord of hosts,’ that is, the wishes"of the man of avarice. The Chaldee, ‘ The prophet said, In my ears I have heard; a decree has gone from the Lord of hosts,’ etc.
Many houses shall be desolate - Referring to the calamities that should come upon the nation for its crimes.
Poole -> Isa 5:9
Poole: Isa 5:9 - -- In mine ears said the Lord I heard God speak what I now about to utter. Heb. In the ears of the Lord ; may relate either,
1. To the foregoing words...
In mine ears said the Lord I heard God speak what I now about to utter. Heb. In the ears of the Lord ; may relate either,
1. To the foregoing words; The cry of your sins, and of the oppressed, as come into God’ s he hears and sees it, and will certainly punish it.
2. To the following clause, which being of great importance, he ushers in with an oath; I speak it in God’ s as well as in yours; I call God to witness the truth of what I say. My houses shall be desolate ; the houses you have so greedily coveted shall cast you out, and become desolate.
Haydock -> Isa 5:9
Haydock: Isa 5:9 - -- Things. Unjust practices. ---
Inhabitant. What will your avarice avail, (Haydock) since you must abandon all? (Calmet)
Things. Unjust practices. ---
Inhabitant. What will your avarice avail, (Haydock) since you must abandon all? (Calmet)
Gill -> Isa 5:9
Gill: Isa 5:9 - -- In mine ears, said the Lord of hosts,.... This may be understood either of the ears of the Lord of hosts, into which came the cry of the sins of cove...
In mine ears, said the Lord of hosts,.... This may be understood either of the ears of the Lord of hosts, into which came the cry of the sins of covetousness and ambition before mentioned; these were taken notice of by the Lord, and he was determined to punish them; or of the ears of the prophet, in whose hearing the Lord said what follows: so the Targum,
"the prophet said, with mine ears I have heard, when this was decreed from before the Lord of hosts:''
of a truth many houses shall be desolate; or "great" ones z; such as the houses of the king, of the princes, and nobles, judges, counsellors, and great men of the earth; not only the house of God, the temple, but a multitude of houses in Jerusalem and elsewhere; which was true not only at the taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, but at the destruction of it by the Romans, to which this prophecy belongs, Mat 23:38 the words are a strong asseveration, and in the form of an oath, as Jarchi and Kimchi observe;
even great and fair, without inhabitants: houses of large and beautiful building shall be laid in such a ruinous condition, that they will not be fit for any to dwell in, nor shall any dwell in them: and this is the judgment upon them for joining house to house; that for laying field to field follows.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Isa 5:1-30
TSK Synopsis: Isa 5:1-30 - --1 Under the parable of a vineyard, God excuses his severe judgment.8 His judgments upon covetousness;11 upon lasciviousness;13 upon impiety;20 and upo...
Maclaren -> Isa 5:8-30
Maclaren: Isa 5:8-30 - --A Prophet's Woes
Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst ...
MHCC -> Isa 5:8-23
MHCC: Isa 5:8-23 - --Here is a woe to those who set their hearts on the wealth of the world. Not that it is sinful for those who have a house and a field to purchase anoth...
Matthew Henry -> Isa 5:8-17
Matthew Henry: Isa 5:8-17 - -- The world and the flesh are the two great enemies that we are in danger of being overpowered by; yet we are in no danger if we do not ourselves yiel...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Isa 5:9-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Isa 5:9-10 - --
And the denunciation of punishment is made by him in very similar terms to those which we find here in Isa 5:9, Isa 5:10 : "Into mine ears Jehovah ...
Constable: Isa 1:1--5:30 - --I. introduction chs. 1--5
The relationship of chapters 1-5 to Isaiah's call in chapter 6 is problematic. Do the ...
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Constable: Isa 5:1-30 - --C. The analogy of wild grapes ch. 5
This is the third and last of Isaiah's introductory oracles. The fir...
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Constable: Isa 5:8-25 - --2. The wildness of the grapes 5:8-25
Yahweh's crop was worthless because it produced wild grapes...
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