Isaiah 26:1-19. The Nation's Prayer for a more complete Salvation
(1) Isaiah 26:1. The nation praises God for the strength and safety of
Jerusalem, henceforth to be the dwelling place of a righteous,
truth-keeping people (1, 2); for the steadfast faith which is now
rewarded with peace (3, 4), and f... [ Continue Reading ]
_salvation will_God _appoint … bulwarks_ Two interpretations are
possible: (_a_) "Salvation will He appoint in place of walls and moat"
(see below), implying that Jerusalem has no material defences, but
only the supernatural protection ("salvation") assured by Jehovah (as
Psalms 125:2; Zechariah 2:4... [ Continue Reading ]
These verses might almost have been written for a dedication of the
fortifications of Jerusalem. Cf. Psalms 48:12 f.... [ Continue Reading ]
Comp. Psalms 118:19-20; Revelation 22:14. "Truth" here means "troth,"
fidelity (Deuteronomy 32:20).... [ Continue Reading ]
A stricter rendering might be: A STEADFAST DISPOSITION THOU GUARDEST
IN CONSTANT PEACE (lit. "peace, peace"), FOR IT IS TRUSTFUL TOWARDS
THEE (see R.V. marg.). The word for "disposition" is elsewhere
translated "imagination" (e.g. Genesis 6:5; Genesis 8:21). Literally
it means a "thing formed" (as i... [ Continue Reading ]
_for in the Lord JEHOVAH_is _everlasting strength_ Render: FOR YAH
YAHVEH (see on Isaiah 12:2) IS AN EVERLASTING ROCK (lit. "a Rock of
Ages"). The preposition _IN_ may be omitted in English (_Bêth
essentiae_).... [ Continue Reading ]
Jehovah has proved himself to be a Rock by the destruction of "the
lofty city"; see on ch. Isaiah 25:2. The principal pause in Isaiah
26:5 should be after the word "city.... [ Continue Reading ]
The _poor_and _needy_are the Jews, as in ch. Isaiah 25:4. The
oppressed triumph over their oppressors. But that they are actually
the instruments of Jehovah's vengeance on the "lofty city" is not
necessarily implied.... [ Continue Reading ]
The verse should probably be read: THE WAY OF THE RIGHTEOUS IS
STRAIGHTNESS; THE PATH OF THE RIGHTEOUS THOU DIRECTEST STRAIGHT. The
"way" of the righteous is here not his inward life-purpose, but his
outward lot. _dost weigh_ lit. "levellest"; as in Proverbs 4:26;
Proverbs 5:6; Proverbs 5:21 (R.V.).... [ Continue Reading ]
That the way of the righteous is made straight by Jehovah, is a
fundamental principle of religion (Proverbs 3:6; Proverbs 15:19, &c.),
but the principle is upheld only by Jehovah moving in His own way of
judgment; therefore the "righteous nation" has waited impatiently for
His judicial interposition... [ Continue Reading ]
_Yea_, in _the way … for thee_ i.e. have stood by the way along
which we expected and desired Jehovah to appear in judgment. The rest
of the verse should be translated as in R.V., TO THY NAME AND TO THY
MEMORIAL IS THE DESIRE OF [OUR] SOUL (or, as Cheyne, "heartfelt
desire"). "Name" and "memorial" a... [ Continue Reading ]
The first half of the verse completes the thought of Isaiah 26:8; the
second is linked to Isaiah 26:10. The speaker is the individualised
community.
_will I seek thee early_ Rather, I SEEK THEE EARNESTLY.
9 B, 10. The motive of this eager longing for judgment is the
conviction that only by this me... [ Continue Reading ]
_the wicked_probably includes both the heathen and the apostate
Israelite.
_the land of uprightness_is the Holy Land; even there, surrounded by
the institutions of a pure religion, the wicked outrages the dictates
of morality, having no eyes for the majesty of Jehovah.... [ Continue Reading ]
To the eye of faith the lifting up of Jehovah's hand has been manifest
in the recent history of Israel, but, as in Isaiah's time, there are
some who "regard not the work of Jehovah nor see the operation of his
hands" (ch. Isaiah 5:12); and for them further judgments are
necessary. The first part of... [ Continue Reading ]
_thou wilt ordain_ or "mayest thou ordain." _peace for us_ cf. Isaiah
26:3.
_for thou also hast wrought_ Better: FOR EVEN OUR WHOLE WORK THOU HAST
WROUGHT FOR US; all that we have achieved inadequate though it be (see
Isaiah 26:17) has been due to thy working for us. A similar thought
underlies the... [ Continue Reading ]
other _lords besides thee_ That the reference is to foreign
despotisms, and not as some have thought to false gods, may be
regarded as certain. The rule of the heathen over the people of God
was an invasion of Jehovah's sovereignty, it was inconsistent with the
ideal of the Theocracy, and hindered t... [ Continue Reading ]
The long heathen domination is now a thing of the past; the oppressors
have gone to the realm of shades, and shall trouble the world no more.... [ Continue Reading ]
Render: THE DEAD SHALL NOT LIVE, THE SHADES (_Rěphâ" îm_, as in
Isaiah 14:9) SHALL NOT RISE, &c. In the form of a general proposition
the writer expresses Israel's sense of security with regard to those
"other lords" who have now vanished from the earth. The idea is
probably suggested by ch. Isaiah... [ Continue Reading ]
_Thou hast increased the nation_ Probably an allusion to ch. Isaiah
9:3. There is no justification for taking the perfects here as
prophetic perfects, or for understanding them in a precative sense. A
real increase of the nation and its territory is regarded as already
effected; this is one of the s... [ Continue Reading ]
_in trouble_("distress" or "straits," as ch. Isaiah 25:4) _have they
visited thee_ i.e. sought after thee. The verb might also mean "missed
thee" felt their need of thee. This was no doubt a spiritual gain, but
the author's complaint is that so little outward benefit has accrued
from the nation's di... [ Continue Reading ]
The poet plunges abruptly into a train of reflection on the depressing
side of the nation's experience.... [ Continue Reading ]
The agony of the crisis is compared to the pangs of a woman in
travail, a common figure, Hosea 13:13; Micah 4:10, &c.
_in thy sight_ Or, BECAUSE OF THEE Thy chastening hand.... [ Continue Reading ]
Retaining the figure the prophet dwells on the abortive issue of the
nation's prayers and sufferings. In the last clause he seems even to
give the figure a closer application. For that sentence is no doubt to
be read as in R.V. marg., NEITHER HAVE INHABITANTS OF THE WORLD BEEN
BORN; i.e. the mother-... [ Continue Reading ]
The answer to these utterances of disappointed hopes is the promise of
the Resurrection. The speaker throughout is the community, and the
words are addressed to God, with the exception of an apostrophe to the
buried Israelites in the middle of the verse. There is indeed no
decisive argument against... [ Continue Reading ]
_enter … and shut thy doors about thee_ Matthew 6:6. There is
nothing, however, to suggest that the words here are a summons to
secret prayer. _until the indignation be overpast_ Job 14:13; Daniel
11:36.... [ Continue Reading ]
The storm of judgment is about to burst on the world, but it will be
of short duration; let the people seclude themselves in the privacy of
their chambers and wait for a glorious salvation (cf. Zephaniah 2:3;
Daniel 12:13).... [ Continue Reading ]
_the Lord_ IS COMING FORTH (fut. instans) _out of his place_ i.e.
heaven. Cf. Micah 1:3.
_the earth also … blood_ Uncovered blood cries for vengeance
(Genesis 4:11; Ezekiel 24:7-8); and the earth, by drinking in innocent
blood, seems to conspire with the murderer, by concealing his guilt.
Comp. Job... [ Continue Reading ]