PREVIOUS CHAPTER - NEXT CHAPTER - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE CHAPTER 52 Isa 52:1-15. FIRST THROUGH THIRTEEN VERSES CONNECTED WITH FIFTY-FIRST CHAPTER. Zion long in bondage (Isa 51:17-20) is called to put on beautiful garments appropriate to its future prosperity.
1. strength--as thy adornment; answering to "beautiful garments" in
the parallel clause. Arouse thyself from dejection and assume
confidence.
2. from the dust--the seat of mourners
(Job 2:12, 13).
3. As you became your foes' servants, without their paying any price for you (Jer 15:13), so they shall release you without demanding any price or reward (Isa 45:13), (where Cyrus is represented as doing so: a type of their final restoration gratuitously in like manner). So the spiritual Israel, "sold under sin," gratuitously (Ro 7:14), shall be redeemed also gratuitously (Isa 55:1).
4. My people--Jacob and his sons.
5. what have I here--that is, what am I called on to do? The fact
"that My people is taken away (into captivity;
Isa 49:24, 25)
for naught" (by gratuitous oppression,
Isa 52:4;
also
Isa 52:3,
and see on
Isa 52:3)
demands My interposition.
6. shall know in that day--when Christ shall reveal Himself to Israel sensibly; the only means whereby their obstinate unbelief shall be overcome (Ps 102:16; Zec 12:10; 14:5).
7. beautiful . . . feet--that is, The advent of such a herald seen
on the distant "mountains"
(see on
Isa 40:9;
Isa 41:27;
Isa 25:6, 7;
So 2:17)
running in haste with the long-expected good tidings, is most
grateful to the desolated city
(Na 1:15).
8. watchmen--set on towers separated by intervals to give the earliest
notice of the approach of any messenger with tidings
(compare
Isa 21:6-8).
The Hebrew is more forcible than English Version, "The
voice of thy watchmen" (exclamatory as in
So 2:8).
"They lift up their voice! together they sing."
9.
(Isa 14:7, 8; 42:11).
10. made bare . . . arm--metaphor from warriors who bare their arm for
battle
(Eze 4:7).
11.
(Isa 48:20;
Zec 2:6, 7).
Long residence in Babylon made many loath to leave it: so as to
mystical Babylon
(Re 18:4).
12. not . . . with haste--as when ye left Egypt
(Ex 12:33, 39;
De 16:3;
compare Note, see on
Isa 28:16).
Ye shall have time to cleanse yourselves and make deliberate
preparation for departure.
13. Here the fifty-third chapter ought to begin, and the fifty-second
chapter end with
Isa 52:12.
This section, from here to end of the fifty-third chapter settles the
controversy with the Jews, if Messiah be the person meant; and with
infidels, if written by Isaiah, or at any time before Christ. The
correspondence with the life and death of Jesus Christ is so minute,
that it could not have resulted from conjecture or accident. An
impostor could not have shaped the course of events so as to
have made his character and life appear to be a fulfilment of it. The
writing is, moreover, declaredly prophetic. The quotations of it
in the New Testament show: (1) that it was, before the time of Jesus, a
recognized part of the Old Testament; (2) that it refers to Messiah
(Mt 8:17;
Mr 15:28;
Lu 22:37;
Joh 12:38;
Ac 8:28-35;
Ro 10:16;
1Pe 2:21-25).
The indirect allusions to it still more clearly prove the Messianic
interpretation; so universal was that interpretation, that it is simply
referred to in connection with the atoning virtue of His death,
without being formally quoted
(Mr 9:12;
Ro 4:25;
1Co 15:3;
2Co 5:21;
1Pe 1:19; 2:21-25;
1Jo 3:5).
The genuineness of the passage is certain; for the Jews would
not have forged it, since it is opposed to their notion of
Messiah, as a triumphant temporal prince. The Christians could
not have forged it; for the Jews, the enemies of Christianity, are "our
librarians" [PALEY]. The Jews try to evade its
force by the figment of two Messiahs, one a suffering Messiah (Ben
Joseph), the other a triumphant Messiah (Ben David). HILLEL maintained that Messiah has already come in the
person of Hezekiah. BUXTORF states that many of
the modern Rabbins believe that He has been come a good while, but will
not manifest Himself because of the sins of the Jews. But the ancient
Jews, as the Chaldee paraphrast, Jonathan, refer it to Messiah; so the
Medrasch Tauchuma (a commentary on the Pentateuch); also Rabbi
Moses Haddarschan (see HENGSTENBERG,
Christology of the Old Testament). Some explain it of the
Jewish people, either in the Babylonish exile, or in their present
sufferings and dispersion. Others, the pious portion of the
nation taken collectively, whose sufferings made a vicarious
satisfaction for the ungodly. Others, Isaiah, or Jeremiah [GESENIUS], the prophets collectively. But an
individual is plainly described: he suffers voluntarily,
innocently, patiently, and as the efficient cause of the
righteousness of His people, which holds good of none other but Messiah
(Isa 53:4-6, 9, 11;
contrast
Jer 20:7; 15:10-21;
Ps 137:8, 9).
Isa 53:9
can hold good of none other. The objection that the sufferings
(Isa 53:1-10)
referred to are represented as past, the glorification alone as
future
(Isa 52:13-15; 53:11, 12)
arises from not seeing that the prophet takes his stand in the
midst of the scenes which he describes as future. The greater
nearness of the first advent, and the interval between it and the
second, are implied by the use of the past tense as to the
first, the future as to the second.
14, 15. Summary of Messiah's history, which is set forth more in
detail in the fifty-third chapter. "Just as many were astonished
(accompanied with aversion,
Jer 18:16; 19:8),
&c.; his visage, &c.; so shall He sprinkle," &c.; Israel in this
answers to its antitype Messiah, now "an astonishment and
byword"
(De 28:37),
hereafter about to be a blessing and means of salvation to many nations
(Isa 2:2, 3;
Mic 5:7).
15. sprinkle many--GESENIUS, for the antithesis to "be astonished,"
translates, "shall cause . . . to exult." But the word universally in
the Old Testament means either to sprinkle with blood, as the high
priest makes an expiation
(Le 4:6; 16:18, 19);
or with water, to purify
(Eze 36:25;
compare as to the Spirit,
Ac 2:33),
both appropriate to Messiah
(Joh 13:8;
Heb 9:13, 14; 10:22; 12:24;
1Pe 1:2).
The antithesis is sufficient without any forced rendering. Many
were astonished; so many (not merely men, but) nations
shall be sprinkled. They were amazed at such an abject person
claiming to be Messiah; yet it is He who shall justify and
purify. Men were dumb with the amazement of scorn at one
marred more than the lowest of men, yet the highest: even
kings
(Isa 49:7, 23)
shall be dumb with awe and veneration ("shut . . .
mouths";
Job 29:9, 10;
Mic 7:16).
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