Isaiah son of Amoz
Woe to Unjust Decrees, Assyria the Rod, and the Return of the Remnant
Isaiah 10 declares that the Lord judges unjust rulers, uses Assyria as the rod of His anger, punishes Assyria’s arrogance, preserves a remnant who return to Him, and cuts down every proud power that exalts itself.
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Isaiah 10 declares that the Lord judges unjust rulers, uses Assyria as the rod of His anger, punishes Assyria’s arrogance, preserves a remnant who return to Him, and cuts down every proud power that exalts itself.
The Lord judges both covenant injustice and imperial arrogance. He may use Assyria to discipline His people, but Assyria remains accountable for pride, cruelty, and self-exaltation. Through judgment, the Lord preserves a remnant who return to Him and learn true reliance.
Judah and Jerusalem, with Israel also in view through the continuing judgment refrain and the Assyrian crisis
Isaiah 10 continues the judgment movement from Isaiah 9. The chapter opens with a woe against unjust lawmakers and oppressive leaders who exploit the poor, widows, and fatherless. It then turns to Assyria, the imperial power the Lord uses as the rod of His anger, but also exposes Assyria’s arrogance and announces Assyria’s own judgment. The chapter ends with remnant hope and the terrifying advance of Assyria toward Zion before the Lord cuts down the proud forest.
Isaiah 10 declares that the Lord judges unjust rulers, uses Assyria as the rod of His anger, punishes Assyria’s arrogance, preserves a remnant who return to Him, and cuts down every proud power that exalts itself.
Isaiah son of Amoz
Judah and Jerusalem, with Israel also in view through the continuing judgment refrain and the Assyrian crisis
Isaiah 10 continues the judgment movement from Isaiah 9. The chapter opens with a woe against unjust lawmakers and oppressive leaders who exploit the poor, widows, and fatherless. It then turns to Assyria, the imperial power the Lord uses as the rod of His anger, but also exposes Assyria’s arrogance and announces Assyria’s own judgment. The chapter ends with remnant hope and the terrifying advance of Assyria toward Zion before the Lord cuts down the proud forest.
- The vulnerable are being oppressed by unjust laws and corrupt decrees. The poor are deprived of rights, widows are preyed upon, and the fatherless are robbed. Nationally, Judah faces the terror of Assyria’s advance, while the faithful must trust that the Lord governs both Assyria’s aggression and Assyria’s downfall.
The chapter uses legal, military, agricultural, and forest imagery. Unjust decrees represent institutionalized wickedness. Assyria is pictured as a rod, club, ax, saw, staff, and forest. The Lord is portrayed as the one who wields the instrument and then burns, cuts, and fells proud trees. The march of Assyrian towns creates a sense of looming invasion.
Within Isaiah 1–12, Isaiah 10 stands as a major theological explanation of divine sovereignty over nations. The Lord judges His covenant people through Assyria, yet Assyria is not autonomous and is not innocent. God uses Assyria as an instrument, then judges Assyria’s arrogant self-exaltation. The chapter also develops the remnant theme: a remnant will return, but only after judgment has passed through the land.
The chapter moves from woe against unjust rulers, to the final judgment refrain, to Assyria as the Lord’s rod, to Assyria’s arrogant boasting, to the Lord’s judgment on Assyria, to remnant return, to comfort for Zion, to the terrifying Assyrian advance, and finally to the Lord cutting down the lofty forest.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Unjust laws and oppressive decrees exploit the vulnerable and invite the day of reckoning.
The Lord sends Assyria as rod and club, though Assyria intends arrogant destruction.
The Lord will punish Assyria’s pride and burn its glory like a forest.
A remnant will stop relying on the one who struck them and return to the Lord, the Mighty God.
Zion is told not to fear Assyria, for the Lord’s anger will turn from His people to Assyria’s destruction.
Assyria advances toward Jerusalem, but the Lord cuts down the proud forest.
- 10:1-4: The Lord condemns unjust decrees that rob the poor, widows, and fatherless of justice.
- 10:5-6: The Lord sends Assyria against a godless people as an instrument of judgment.
- 10:7-14: Assyria arrogantly thinks its conquests come from its own strength and wisdom.
- 10:15: The ax and saw imagery exposes Assyria’s folly in boasting over the Lord who wields it.
- 10:16-19: The Lord will consume Assyria’s warriors, forests, orchards, briers, and thorns.
- 10:20-23: The survivors of Israel will no longer rely on their oppressor but on the Lord, the Holy One of Israel.
- 10:24-27: The Lord comforts Zion, promising that Assyria’s rod will be broken and the yoke removed.
- 10:28-34: Assyria advances toward Jerusalem, but the Lord Almighty fells the lofty forest.
Theological Argument
The Lord judges both covenant injustice and imperial arrogance. He may use Assyria to discipline His people, but Assyria remains accountable for pride, cruelty, and self-exaltation. Through judgment, the Lord preserves a remnant who return to Him and learn true reliance.
Unjust rulers are condemned; Assyria is commissioned; Assyria boasts; the LORD exposes Assyria as a tool; Assyria is burned; the remnant returns; Zion is comforted; the proud forest falls.
- 1.Legal systems can become instruments of covenant rebellion.
- 2.Oppression of the vulnerable brings the day of reckoning.
- 3.The LORD is sovereign over Assyria’s rise and military action.
- 4.God’s use of an instrument does not excuse the instrument’s evil intent.
- 5.Assyria’s arrogance is rooted in self-attribution.
- 6.The tool cannot boast over the one who wields it.
- 7.The Holy One will consume arrogant glory.
- 8.Judgment purifies reliance among the remnant.
- 9.The remnant’s return is real, but judgment remains decreed.
- 10.Zion must interpret Assyria’s nearness under the LORD’s final word.
Theological Focus
- Institutional Injustice
- Divine Sovereignty Over Nations
- Human Accountability
- Pride and Self-Exaltation
- The Holiness of God
- Remnant Return
- True Reliance
- Comfort for Zion
- Humbling the Lofty
- Justice
- Divine Sovereignty
- Pride
- Holiness
- Judgment
- Remnant
- Comfort
Theological Themes
The chapter condemns unjust decrees that rob the poor, widows, and fatherless.
Assyria is the rod and club of the Lord’s anger.
Assyria is judged for arrogant intent even though the Lord uses Assyria for judgment.
Assyria boasts in its own strength, wisdom, conquest, and superiority.
The Light of Israel becomes a fire and the Holy One a flame against Assyria’s glory.
A remnant of Jacob will return to the Mighty God.
The remnant will no longer rely on the one who struck them but on the Lord.
Zion is told not to fear Assyria because the Lord will break the yoke.
The Lord cuts down the proud imperial forest and brings the tall trees low.
Covenant Significance
Isaiah 10 shows that covenant judgment includes accountability for unjust systems that exploit the vulnerable. The Lord may discipline His people through Assyria, but His covenant purpose continues through a returning remnant. The remnant’s defining mark is restored reliance on the Lord rather than on the power that struck them.
- Unjust laws deprive the poor, widows, and fatherless of their rights.
- The oppressors will have no refuge in the day of punishment.
- The Lord sends Assyria as rod and club against a people who anger Him.
- A remnant will return to the Mighty God after judgment.
- The survivors will no longer rely on Assyria but will rely on the Lord.
- The Lord tells His people in Zion not to fear Assyria because the yoke will be broken.
Canonical Connections
Isaiah 10 declares that the Lord judges unjust rulers, uses Assyria as the rod of His anger, punishes Assyria’s arrogance, preserves a remnant who return to Him, and cuts down every proud power that exalts itself.
Cross References
him, being delivered up by the determined counsel and foreknowledge of God, you have taken by the hand of lawless men, crucified and killed;
For by him all things were created in the heavens and on the earth, visible things and invisible things, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things have been created through him and for him. He is before all...
wiping out the handwriting in ordinances which was against us. He has taken it out of the way, nailing it to the cross. Having stripped the principalities and the powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it.
for by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, that no one would boast.
Since then the children have shared in flesh and blood, he also himself in the same way partook of the same, that through death he might bring to nothing him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might deliver all of them who...
My brothers, don’t hold the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ of glory with partiality. For if a man with a gold ring, in fine clothing, comes into your synagogue, and a poor man in filthy clothing also comes in, and you pay special attention...
But he gives more grace. Therefore it says, “God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble.”
I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted.”
“The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to heal the broken hearted, to proclaim release to the captives, recovering of sight to the blind, to deliver those who are...
“Come to me, all you who labor and are heavily burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart; and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is...
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint, dill, and cumin, and have left undone the weightier matters of the law: justice, mercy, and faith. But you ought to have done these, and not to have left the other undone.
“Enter in by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter in by it. How narrow is the gate, and restricted is the way that leads to life! Few are those who find it.
Therefore God also highly exalted him, and gave to him the name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, those on earth, and those under the earth, and that every tongue should confess...
The ten horns which you saw, and the beast, these will hate the prostitute, will make her desolate, will strip her naked, will eat her flesh, and will burn her utterly with fire. For God has put in their hearts to do what he has in mind,...
I saw the heaven opened, and behold, a white horse, and he who sat on it is called Faithful and True. In righteousness he judges and makes war. His eyes are a flame of fire, and on his head are many crowns. He has names written and a name...
Out of his mouth proceeds a sharp, double-edged sword, that with it he should strike the nations. He will rule them with an iron rod. He treads the wine press of the fierceness of the wrath of God, the Almighty. He has on his garment and...
I saw a great white throne, and him who sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away. There was found no place for them. I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne, and they opened books. Another...
Even so then at this present time also there is a remnant according to the election of grace.
We know that all things work together for good for those who love God, for those who are called according to his purpose.
Isaiah cries concerning Israel, “If the number of the children of Israel are as the sand of the sea, it is the remnant who will be saved; for He will finish the work and cut it short in righteousness, because the LORD will make a short...
In the ninth year of Hoshea the king of Assyria took Samaria, and carried Israel away to Assyria, and placed them in Halah, and on the Habor, the river of Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes. It was so because the children of Israel had...
The remnant that has escaped of the house of Judah will again take root downward, and bear fruit upward. For out of Jerusalem a remnant will go out, and out of Mount Zion those who shall escape. Yahweh’s zeal will perform this.
“Therefore Yahweh says concerning the king of Assyria, ‘He will not come to this city, nor shoot an arrow there. He will not come before it with shield, nor cast up a mound against it. He will return the same way that he came, and he will...
That night, Yahweh’s angel went out, and struck one hundred eighty-five thousand in the camp of the Assyrians. When men arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies. So Sennacherib king of Assyria departed, and went and...
Therefore, because you trample on the poor, and take taxes from him of wheat: You have built houses of cut stone, but you will not dwell in them. You have planted pleasant vineyards, but you shall not drink their wine. For I know how many...
You shall not deprive the foreigner or the fatherless of justice, nor take a widow’s clothing in pledge;
You shall not deprive the foreigner or the fatherless of justice, nor take a widow’s clothing in pledge; but you shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt, and Yahweh your God redeemed you there. Therefore I command you to do this...
Yahweh will bring a nation against you from far, from the end of the earth, as the eagle flies: a nation whose language you will not understand,
Yahweh will bring a nation against you from far, from the end of the earth, as the eagle flies: a nation whose language you will not understand, a nation of fierce facial expressions, that doesn’t respect the elderly, nor show favor to the...
It shall happen, when all these things have come on you, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you, and you shall call them to mind among all the nations where Yahweh your God has driven you, and return to Yahweh your God and...
Isaiah 10 shows that sin corrupts both individuals and systems. It appears in unjust decrees, exploitation of the vulnerable, arrogant self-exaltation, violent domination, false reliance, and refusal to acknowledge God’s sovereignty. The Lord judges all such pride and injustice, yet He preserves a remnant who return to Him.
- Do not treat injustice as merely political · Isaiah presents it as covenant rebellion before the Lord.
- Do not use divine sovereignty to excuse Assyria’s evil.
- Do not preach remnant hope without the severity of decreed destruction.
- Do not reduce Christ-centered fulfillment to vague comfort · Isaiah 10 points toward the need for righteous rule, justice for the poor, and the humbling of proud powers.
- Do not detach Isaiah 10 from Isaiah 11 · the felled forest prepares for the shoot from Jesse.
him, being delivered up by the determined counsel and foreknowledge of God, you have taken by the hand of lawless men, crucified and killed;
For by him all things were created in the heavens and on the earth, visible things and invisible things, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things have been created through him and for him. He is before all...
wiping out the handwriting in ordinances which was against us. He has taken it out of the way, nailing it to the cross. Having stripped the principalities and the powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it.
for by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, that no one would boast.
Since then the children have shared in flesh and blood, he also himself in the same way partook of the same, that through death he might bring to nothing him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might deliver all of them who...
My brothers, don’t hold the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ of glory with partiality. For if a man with a gold ring, in fine clothing, comes into your synagogue, and a poor man in filthy clothing also comes in, and you pay special attention...
But he gives more grace. Therefore it says, “God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble.”
I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted.”
“The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to heal the broken hearted, to proclaim release to the captives, recovering of sight to the blind, to deliver those who are...
“Come to me, all you who labor and are heavily burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart; and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is...
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint, dill, and cumin, and have left undone the weightier matters of the law: justice, mercy, and faith. But you ought to have done these, and not to have left the other undone.
“Enter in by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter in by it. How narrow is the gate, and restricted is the way that leads to life! Few are those who find it.
Therefore God also highly exalted him, and gave to him the name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, those on earth, and those under the earth, and that every tongue should confess...
The ten horns which you saw, and the beast, these will hate the prostitute, will make her desolate, will strip her naked, will eat her flesh, and will burn her utterly with fire. For God has put in their hearts to do what he has in mind,...
I saw the heaven opened, and behold, a white horse, and he who sat on it is called Faithful and True. In righteousness he judges and makes war. His eyes are a flame of fire, and on his head are many crowns. He has names written and a name...
Out of his mouth proceeds a sharp, double-edged sword, that with it he should strike the nations. He will rule them with an iron rod. He treads the wine press of the fierceness of the wrath of God, the Almighty. He has on his garment and...
I saw a great white throne, and him who sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away. There was found no place for them. I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne, and they opened books. Another...
Even so then at this present time also there is a remnant according to the election of grace.
We know that all things work together for good for those who love God, for those who are called according to his purpose.
Isaiah cries concerning Israel, “If the number of the children of Israel are as the sand of the sea, it is the remnant who will be saved; for He will finish the work and cut it short in righteousness, because the LORD will make a short...
Primary Emphasis
Isaiah 10 contributes to Christ-centered biblical theology by exposing the need for a righteous ruler who protects the vulnerable, humbles proud powers, and gathers a true remnant. The chapter prepares for Isaiah 11, where a shoot from Jesse will judge with righteousness and defend the poor. The remnant returning to the Mighty God also contributes to the broader messianic hope fulfilled in Christ.
Chapter Contribution
The Lord judges both covenant injustice and imperial arrogance. He may use Assyria to discipline His people, but Assyria remains accountable for pride, cruelty, and self-exaltation. Through judgment, the Lord preserves a remnant who return to Him and learn true reliance.
No human authority can escape divine reckoning for unjust governance.
God disciplines His people through historical events in response to hypocrisy.
Care for widows, orphans, and the poor is central to covenant faithfulness.
Judgment refines God’s people, producing a community marked by authentic trust.
The Lord breaks oppressive yokes and rescues His covenant people.
God’s determined plan governs both judgment and salvation.
God judges rulers and systems that pervert justice and exploit the vulnerable.
God governs the rise and fall of nations, completing His purposes before turning to judge pride.
God directs the actions of nations to accomplish His righteous purposes in history.
True restoration involves sincere reliance on the Lord rather than political security.
Arrogant motives remain culpable even when actions fulfill divine decree.
Arrogant powers are cut down when they exalt themselves against God.
Foreign powers may serve as tools of divine discipline without sharing God’s intent.
God’s chastening of His people is measured and temporary.
Those used by God remain subordinate and accountable to His authority.
Self-exaltation before God leads to inevitable judgment and humiliation.
Persistent injustice sustains the reality of God’s outstretched hand in discipline.
God’s justice extends beyond His covenant people to include all nations.
God preserves a faithful group within His people to carry forward His covenant purposes.
The Lord condemns unjust laws that exploit the poor, widows, and fatherless.
Assyria is the rod of the Lord’s anger and the club of His wrath.
Assyria is judged for arrogant intent despite being used by the Lord.
Assyria boasts in its own strength, wisdom, conquest, and power.
The Light of Israel and Holy One burn against Assyria’s glory.
The Lord judges oppressive rulers, His rebellious people, and arrogant Assyria.
A remnant will return to the Mighty God.
The remnant will no longer rely on the one who struck them but on the Lord.
Zion is told not to fear Assyria because the Lord will break the yoke.
The Lord cuts down the tall trees and proud forest.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Sense woe, alas
Definition An interjection of warning, lament, or doom.
References Isaiah 10:1
Lexicon woe, alas
Why it matters The woe introduces divine judgment against those who legalize oppression.
Sense statute, decree, ordinance
Definition A decree, statute, or prescribed law.
References Isaiah 10:1
Lexicon statute, decree, ordinance
Why it matters The chapter condemns the writing of laws that formalize injustice.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense trouble, oppression, mischief, toil
Definition Trouble, toil, injustice, or oppressive mischief.
References Isaiah 10:1
Lexicon trouble, oppression, mischief, toil
Why it matters The decrees are not neutral; they produce oppression.
Sense poor, weak, lowly
Definition Those who are poor, weak, or socially vulnerable.
References Isaiah 10:2
Lexicon poor, weak, lowly
Why it matters The poor are specifically deprived by unjust decrees.
Sense justice, judgment, legal right
Definition Justice, judgment, right order, or legal right.
References Isaiah 10:2
Lexicon justice, judgment, legal right
Why it matters The central legal offense is depriving the vulnerable of justice.
Form in passage Feminine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense widows
Definition Women whose husbands have died and who are often socially vulnerable.
References Isaiah 10:2
Lexicon widows
Why it matters The exploitation of widows is a covenant violation repeatedly condemned in Scripture.
Form in passage Masculine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense fatherless, orphan
Definition A fatherless child or orphan, one needing protection.
References Isaiah 10:2
Lexicon fatherless, orphan
Why it matters The fatherless become prey under unjust leaders, revealing deep covenant corruption.
Sense Assyria
Definition The major imperial power used by the LORD as an instrument of judgment.
References Isaiah 10:5
Lexicon Assyria
Why it matters Assyria is central to the chapter as both instrument and object of judgment.
Sense rod, staff, tribe, scepter
Definition A rod, staff, scepter, or instrument of discipline.
References Isaiah 10:5, 10:24
Lexicon rod, staff, tribe, scepter
Why it matters Assyria is the rod of the Lord’s anger, emphasizing instrumentality.
Sense anger, wrath
Definition Anger or wrath, often pictured as burning.
References Isaiah 10:5, 10:25
Lexicon anger, wrath
Why it matters Assyria is used in connection with the Lord’s anger against rebellion.
Sense staff, rod, tribe
Definition A staff or rod used as an instrument of authority or discipline.
References Isaiah 10:5, 10:24
Lexicon staff, rod, tribe
Why it matters The staff image reinforces that Assyria is wielded by the Lord.
Sense godless nation, profane people
Definition A nation characterized by godlessness or profanity.
References Isaiah 10:6
Lexicon godless nation, profane people
Why it matters The Lord’s people are described in shocking terms because of their covenant rebellion.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense spoil, plunder
Definition Spoil or goods taken in conquest.
References Isaiah 10:6
Lexicon spoil, plunder
Why it matters Assyria’s judgment work includes seizure and devastation, echoing earlier sign-child themes.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense heart, inner person, will
Definition The inner person, including mind, will, desire, and intention.
References Isaiah 10:7, 10:12
Lexicon heart, inner person, will
Why it matters Assyria’s inner intent differs from the Lord’s purpose and is judged.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense greatness, pride, magnitude
Definition Greatness or pride, depending on context.
References Isaiah 10:12
Lexicon greatness, pride, magnitude
Why it matters The Lord punishes the willful pride of Assyria’s heart.
Sense to be high, exalted, lifted up
Definition To be high or exalted, often negatively as arrogance.
References Isaiah 10:12
Lexicon to be high, exalted, lifted up
Why it matters Assyria’s lifted-up eyes reveal the pride the Lord will bring down.
Sense strength, power, ability
Definition Strength, power, or capacity.
References Isaiah 10:13
Lexicon strength, power, ability
Why it matters Assyria falsely attributes conquest to its own strength.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense wisdom, skill
Definition Wisdom, skill, or shrewd capacity.
References Isaiah 10:13
Lexicon wisdom, skill
Why it matters Assyria boasts in its own wisdom, denying the Lord’s sovereignty.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense ax
Definition A cutting tool wielded by a worker.
References Isaiah 10:15
Lexicon ax
Why it matters The ax image exposes the absurdity of Assyria boasting over the Lord who wields it.
Sense saw
Definition A saw used for cutting.
References Isaiah 10:15
Lexicon saw
Why it matters Like the ax, the saw is a tool and cannot claim independent greatness.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense Light of Israel
Definition A title for the LORD as the light of his people.
References Isaiah 10:17
Lexicon Light of Israel
Why it matters The Light of Israel becomes fire against Assyria’s pride.
Sense Holy One
Definition The holy God, set apart in purity and majesty.
References Isaiah 10:17, 10:20
Lexicon Holy One
Why it matters The Holy One is both the fire against Assyria and the one upon whom the remnant relies.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense remnant, remainder
Definition Those who remain after judgment.
References Isaiah 10:20-22
Lexicon remnant, remainder
Why it matters The remnant theme reaches a major statement in this chapter.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to return, turn back, repent
Definition To return, turn back, or repent.
References Isaiah 10:21-22
Lexicon to return, turn back, repent
Why it matters The remnant returns to the Mighty God, fulfilling Shear-Jashub’s sign-name trajectory.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense Mighty God
Definition A title for God emphasizing divine might.
References Isaiah 10:21
Lexicon Mighty God
Why it matters The remnant returns to the Mighty God, echoing the royal title in Isaiah 9:6.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense decreed destruction, determined annihilation
Definition Destruction decisively determined or decreed.
References Isaiah 10:22-23
Lexicon decreed destruction, determined annihilation
Why it matters Remnant hope stands alongside the certainty and severity of judgment.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense yoke, burden
Definition A yoke or burden of oppression.
References Isaiah 10:27
Lexicon yoke, burden
Why it matters The Lord promises to lift and break Assyria’s yoke from His people.
Sense Lebanon
Definition A region known for great forests, especially cedars.
References Isaiah 10:34
Lexicon Lebanon
Why it matters Lebanon symbolizes majestic forest strength brought down before the Mighty One.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
- Isaiah 10 warns that God judges both unjust systems within His covenant people and arrogant empires outside them. Oppressors cannot hide behind legality, and instruments of judgment cannot boast as though they are ultimate.
- Legal authority can become legalized oppression.
- The poor, widows, and fatherless are seen by the Lord when their rights are stolen.
- The day of reckoning will expose every false refuge.
- Being used by God does not excuse pride or wicked intent.
- Boasting in strength and wisdom is rebellion against the Lord’s sovereignty.
- The ax cannot boast over the one who swings it.
- The Holy One burns through arrogant glory.
- False reliance must be broken for true reliance to return.
- The nearness of Assyria is terrifying, but the Lord’s final word is stronger.
- Isaiah 10 is mainly about ancient geopolitics and has little theological relevance. - Isaiah 10 is a theological interpretation of power, injustice, divine sovereignty, human accountability, remnant hope, and the humbling of pride.
- Because God uses Assyria, Assyria is morally innocent. - The chapter explicitly judges Assyria for arrogant intent, boasting, and destructive self-exaltation.
- The Lord’s sovereignty cancels human responsibility. - Isaiah 10 holds both together: the Lord sends Assyria, and Assyria is punished for its pride and violence.
- The woe against unjust decrees is disconnected from the Assyria section. - Both sections concern judgment: the Lord judges injustice inside the covenant community and arrogance in the imperial instrument.
- The remnant promise means judgment will be light. - The chapter says destruction has been decreed. Remnant hope survives through severe judgment.
- Zion is told not to fear because Assyria is not dangerous. - Assyria is genuinely terrifying, but its power is limited by the Lord who will break the yoke.
- The forest imagery is only decorative poetry. - The forest imagery represents proud imperial greatness brought low by the Lord.
- Where might I benefit from systems, policies, or habits that disadvantage the poor or vulnerable?
- What refuge would fail me in the day of the Lord’s reckoning?
- Do I interpret powerful people and nations as ultimate, or as accountable under the Lord’s hand?
- Where am I tempted to excuse evil because God can use it?
- Do I quietly believe, 'By my strength and wisdom I have done this'?
- What would change if I truly believed I am an instrument in God’s hand, not the sovereign actor?
- What false reliance must judgment or discipline expose and sever in me?
- Am I willing to return to the Mighty God even if the path back passes through severe pruning?
- What Assyrian threat feels near enough to make me forget the Lord’s promise to break the yoke?
- Do I admire the lofty forest of human power, or do I trust the Lord who cuts it down?
- Preach Isaiah 10 as a theology of power. The Lord judges unjust authority among His people and arrogant empire among the nations. Keep divine sovereignty and human accountability together.
- The opening woe warns leaders that decisions, policies, and structures must not oppress the vulnerable. Leadership is accountable before the Lord for how it treats those with least leverage.
- For those afraid of powerful people or systems, Isaiah 10 shows that the rod is not ultimate. The Lord holds the rod, limits the rod, and can break the rod.
- Train believers to identify false reliance. The remnant is marked by no longer relying on the one who struck them but relying on the Lord.
- Use the chapter to teach that concern for the poor, widows, and fatherless is not optional social decoration · it is covenant faithfulness under the Lord’s justice.
- Warn against self-attribution in ministry, family, work, or leadership. Assyria’s 'by my strength and wisdom' is the language of pride under judgment.
- The march toward Jerusalem creates real tension, but the final word is the Lord cutting down the proud. This gives courage without denying danger.
- Connect Isaiah 10 to Isaiah 11. The proud forest is cut down, then the shoot from Jesse rises. God’s answer to arrogant power is the righteous Davidic King.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Isaiah 10 forms a just, humble, God-reliant people who refuse oppressive power, reject arrogant boasting, trust the Lord’s sovereignty, and return to the Mighty God as the only true refuge.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Trace how divine glory, revealed majesty, and Christ-centered exaltation move across Scripture.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Follow shepherding as divine care, messianic leadership, and pastoral oversight across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from woe against unjust rulers, to the final judgment refrain, to Assyria as the Lord’s rod, to Assyria’s arrogant boasting, to the Lord’s judgment on Assyria, to remnant return, to comfort for Zion, to the terrifying Assyrian advance, and finally to the Lord cutting down the lofty forest.
Isaiah 10 shows that covenant judgment includes accountability for unjust systems that exploit the vulnerable. The Lord may discipline His people through Assyria, but His covenant purpose continues through a returning remnant. The remnant’s defining mark is restored reliance on the Lord rather than on the power that struck them.
Isaiah 10 shows that sin corrupts both individuals and systems. It appears in unjust decrees, exploitation of the vulnerable, arrogant self-exaltation, violent domination, false reliance, and refusal to acknowledge God’s sovereignty. The Lord judges all such pride and injustice, yet He preserves a remnant who return to Him.
Focus Points
- Institutional Injustice
- Divine Sovereignty Over Nations
- Human Accountability
- Pride and Self-Exaltation
- The Holiness of God
- Remnant Return
- True Reliance
- Comfort for Zion
- Humbling the Lofty
- Justice
- Divine Sovereignty
- Pride
- Holiness
- Judgment
- Remnant
- Comfort
Passages
Chapter opening: Isaiah 10:1-4
Isa 10:5-6 The law of contrast prevails in prophecy, as it does also in the history of salvation. When distress is at its height, it is suddenly brought to an end, and changed into relief; and when prophecy has become as black with darkness as in the previous section, it suddenly becomes as bright and cloudless as in that which is opening now. The hoi (woe) pronounced upon Israel becomes a hoi upon Asshur.
Proud Asshur, with its confidence in its own strength, after having served for a time as the goad of Jehovah’s wrath, now falls a victim to that wrath itself. Its attack upon Jerusalem leads to its own overthrow; and on the ruins of the kingdom of the world there rises up the kingdom of the great and righteous Son of David, who rules in peace over His redeemed people, and the nations that rejoice in Him: - the counterpart of the redemption from Egypt, and one as rich in materials for songs of praise as the passage through the Red Sea.
The Messianic prophecy, which turns its darker side towards unbelief in chapter 7, and whose promising aspect burst like a great light through the darkness in Isaiah 8:5-9:6, is standing now upon its third and highest stage. In chapter 7 it is like a star in the night; in Isaiah 8:5-9:6, like the morning dawn; and now the sky is perfectly cloudless, and it appears like the noonday sun.
The prophet has now penetrated to the light fringe of Isa 6:1-13. The name Shear-yashub , having emptied itself of all the curse that it contained, is now transformed into a pure promise. And it becomes perfectly clear what the name Immanuel and the name given to Immanuel, El gibbor (mighty God), declared. The remnant of Israel turns to God the mighty One; and God the mighty is henceforth with His people in the Sprout of Jesse, who has the seven Spirits of God dwelling within Himself.
So far as the date of composition is concerned, the majority of the more recent commentators agree in assigning it to the time of Hezekiah, because Isa 10:9-11 presupposes the destruction of Samaria by Shalmanassar, which took place in the sixth year of Hezekiah. But it was only from the prophet’s point of view that this event was already past; it had not actually taken place.
The prophet had already predicted that Samaria, and with Samaria the kingdom of Israel, would succumb to the Assyrians, and had even fixed the years (Isa 7:8 and Isa 8:4, Isa 8:7). Why, then, should he not be able to presuppose it here as an event already past? The stamp on this section does not tally at all with that of Isaiah’s prophecy in the times of Hezekiah; whereas, on the other hand, it forms so integral a link in the prophetic cycle in chapters 7-12, and is interwoven in so many ways with that which precedes, and of which it forms both the continuation and crown, that we have no hesitation in assigning it, with Vitringa, Caspari, and Drechsler, to the first three years of the reign of Ahaz, though without deciding whether it preceded or followed the destruction of the two allies by Tiglath-pileser.
It is by no means impossible that it may have preceded it. The prophet commences with hoi (woe!) , which is always used as an expression of wrathful indignation to introduce the proclamation of judgment upon the person named; although, as in the present instance, this may not always follow immediately (cf. , Isa 1:4, Isa 1:5-9), but may be preceded by the announcement of the sin by which the judgment had been provoked.
In the first place, Asshur is more particularly indicated as the chosen instrument of divine judgment upon all Israel. “Woe to Asshur, the rod of mine anger, and it is a staff in their hand, mine indignation. Against a wicked nation will I send them, and against the people of my wrath give them a charge, to spoil spoil, and to prey prey, to make it trodden down like street-mire.
” “ Mine indignation :” za‛mi is either a permutation of the predicative הוּא, which is placed emphatically in the foreground (compare the אתּה־הּוּא in Jer 14:22, which is also written with makkeph ), as we have translated it, though without taking הוּא as a copula (= est ), as Ewald does; or else בידם הוּא is written elliptically for בידם הוּא אשׁר, “the staff which they hold is mine indignation” (Ges. , Rosenmüller, and others), in which case, however, we should rather expect הוא זעמי בידם ומטה.
It is quite inadmissible, however, to take za‛mi as a separate genitive to matteh , and to point the latter with zere , as Knobel has done; a thing altogether unparalleled in the Hebrew language. The futures in Isa 10:6 are to be taken literally; for what Asshur did to Israel in the sixty year of Hezekiah’s reign, and to Judah in his fourteenth year, was still in the future at the time when Isaiah prophesied.
Instead of וּלשׂימו the keri has וּלשׂוּמו, the form in which the infinitive is written in other passages when connected with suffixes (see, on the other hand, 2Sa 14:7). “ Trodden down: ” mirmas with short a is the older form, which was retained along with the other form with the a lengthened by the tone (Ewald §160, c ).
Isa 10:7-11 Asshur was to be an instrument of divine wrath upon all Israel; but it would exalt itself, and make itself the end instead of the means. Isa 10:7 “Nevertheless he meaneth not so, neither doth his heart think so; for it is in his heart to destroy and cut off nations not a few. ” Asshur did not think so ( lo' - cēn ), i. e. , not as he ought to think, seeing that his power over Israel was determined by Jehovah Himself.
For what filled his heart was the endeavour, peculiar to the imperial power, to destroy not a few nations, i. e. , as many nations as possible, for the purpose of extending his own dominions, and with the determination to tolerate no other independent nation, and the desire to deal with Judah as with all the rest. For Jehovah was nothing more in his esteem than one of the idols of the nations.
Isa 10:8-11 “For he saith, Are not my generals all kings? Is not Calno as Carchemish, or Hamath as Arpad, or Samaria as Damascus? As my hand hath reached the kingdoms of the idols, and their graven images were more than those of Jerusalem and Samaria; shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria and her idols, do likewise to Jerusalem and her idols? ” The king of Asshur bore the title of the great king (Isa 36:4), and indeed, as we may infer from Eze 26:7, that of the king of kings.
The generals in his army he could call kings, because the satraps who led their several contingents were equal to kings in the extent and splendour of their government, and some of them were really conquered kings (cf. , 2Ki 25:28). He proudly asks whether every one of the cities named has not been as incapable as the rest, of offering a successful resistance to him.
Carchemish is the later Circesium (Cercusium), at the junction of the Chaboras with the Euphrates (see above); Calno , the later Ctesiphon , on the left bank of the Tigris; Arpad (according to Merâshid , i. p. 47, in the pashalic of Chaleb, i. e. , Aleppo) and Hamath (i. e. , Epiphania) were Syrian cities, the latter on the river Orontes, still a large and wealthy place.
The king of Asshur had also already conquered Samaria, at the time when the prophet introduced him as uttering these words. Jerusalem, therefore, would be unable to resist him. As he had obtained possession of idolatrous kingdoms (ל מעא, to reach, as in Psa 21:9 : hâ - 'elil with the article indicating the genus), which had more idols than Jerusalem or than Samaria; so would he also overcome Jerusalem, which had just as few and just as powerless idols as Samaria had.
Observe there that Isa 10:11 is the apodosis to Isa 10:10, and that the comparative clause of Isa 10:10 is repeated in Isa 10:11, for the purpose of instituting a comparison, more especially with Samaria and Jerusalem. The king of Asshur calls the gods of the nations by the simple name of idols, though the prophet does not therefore make him speak from his own Israelitish standpoint.
On the contrary, the great sin of the king of Asshur consisted in the manner in which he spoke. For since he recognised no other gods than his own Assyrian national deities, he placed Jehovah among the idols of the nations, and, what ought particularly to be observed, with the other idols, whose worship had been introduced into Samaria and Jerusalem. But in this very fact there was so far consolation for the worshippers of Jehovah, that such blasphemy of the one living God would not remain unavenged; whilst for the worshipers of idols it contained a painful lesson, since their gods really deserved nothing better than that contempt should be heaped upon them.
The prophet has now described the sin of Asshur. It was ambitious self-exaltation above Jehovah, amounting even to blasphemy. And yet he was only the staff of Jehovah, who could make use of him as He would.
Isa 10:7-11 Asshur was to be an instrument of divine wrath upon all Israel; but it would exalt itself, and make itself the end instead of the means. Isa 10:7 “Nevertheless he meaneth not so, neither doth his heart think so; for it is in his heart to destroy and cut off nations not a few. ” Asshur did not think so ( lo' - cēn ), i. e. , not as he ought to think, seeing that his power over Israel was determined by Jehovah Himself.
For what filled his heart was the endeavour, peculiar to the imperial power, to destroy not a few nations, i. e. , as many nations as possible, for the purpose of extending his own dominions, and with the determination to tolerate no other independent nation, and the desire to deal with Judah as with all the rest. For Jehovah was nothing more in his esteem than one of the idols of the nations.
Isa 10:8-11 “For he saith, Are not my generals all kings? Is not Calno as Carchemish, or Hamath as Arpad, or Samaria as Damascus? As my hand hath reached the kingdoms of the idols, and their graven images were more than those of Jerusalem and Samaria; shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria and her idols, do likewise to Jerusalem and her idols? ” The king of Asshur bore the title of the great king (Isa 36:4), and indeed, as we may infer from Eze 26:7, that of the king of kings.
The generals in his army he could call kings, because the satraps who led their several contingents were equal to kings in the extent and splendour of their government, and some of them were really conquered kings (cf. , 2Ki 25:28). He proudly asks whether every one of the cities named has not been as incapable as the rest, of offering a successful resistance to him.
Carchemish is the later Circesium (Cercusium), at the junction of the Chaboras with the Euphrates (see above); Calno , the later Ctesiphon , on the left bank of the Tigris; Arpad (according to Merâshid , i. p. 47, in the pashalic of Chaleb, i. e. , Aleppo) and Hamath (i. e. , Epiphania) were Syrian cities, the latter on the river Orontes, still a large and wealthy place.
The king of Asshur had also already conquered Samaria, at the time when the prophet introduced him as uttering these words. Jerusalem, therefore, would be unable to resist him. As he had obtained possession of idolatrous kingdoms (ל מעא, to reach, as in Psa 21:9 : hâ - 'elil with the article indicating the genus), which had more idols than Jerusalem or than Samaria; so would he also overcome Jerusalem, which had just as few and just as powerless idols as Samaria had.
Observe there that Isa 10:11 is the apodosis to Isa 10:10, and that the comparative clause of Isa 10:10 is repeated in Isa 10:11, for the purpose of instituting a comparison, more especially with Samaria and Jerusalem. The king of Asshur calls the gods of the nations by the simple name of idols, though the prophet does not therefore make him speak from his own Israelitish standpoint.
On the contrary, the great sin of the king of Asshur consisted in the manner in which he spoke. For since he recognised no other gods than his own Assyrian national deities, he placed Jehovah among the idols of the nations, and, what ought particularly to be observed, with the other idols, whose worship had been introduced into Samaria and Jerusalem. But in this very fact there was so far consolation for the worshippers of Jehovah, that such blasphemy of the one living God would not remain unavenged; whilst for the worshipers of idols it contained a painful lesson, since their gods really deserved nothing better than that contempt should be heaped upon them.
The prophet has now described the sin of Asshur. It was ambitious self-exaltation above Jehovah, amounting even to blasphemy. And yet he was only the staff of Jehovah, who could make use of him as He would.
Isa 10:7-11 Asshur was to be an instrument of divine wrath upon all Israel; but it would exalt itself, and make itself the end instead of the means. Isa 10:7 “Nevertheless he meaneth not so, neither doth his heart think so; for it is in his heart to destroy and cut off nations not a few. ” Asshur did not think so ( lo' - cēn ), i. e. , not as he ought to think, seeing that his power over Israel was determined by Jehovah Himself.
For what filled his heart was the endeavour, peculiar to the imperial power, to destroy not a few nations, i. e. , as many nations as possible, for the purpose of extending his own dominions, and with the determination to tolerate no other independent nation, and the desire to deal with Judah as with all the rest. For Jehovah was nothing more in his esteem than one of the idols of the nations.
Isa 10:8-11 “For he saith, Are not my generals all kings? Is not Calno as Carchemish, or Hamath as Arpad, or Samaria as Damascus? As my hand hath reached the kingdoms of the idols, and their graven images were more than those of Jerusalem and Samaria; shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria and her idols, do likewise to Jerusalem and her idols? ” The king of Asshur bore the title of the great king (Isa 36:4), and indeed, as we may infer from Eze 26:7, that of the king of kings.
The generals in his army he could call kings, because the satraps who led their several contingents were equal to kings in the extent and splendour of their government, and some of them were really conquered kings (cf. , 2Ki 25:28). He proudly asks whether every one of the cities named has not been as incapable as the rest, of offering a successful resistance to him.
Carchemish is the later Circesium (Cercusium), at the junction of the Chaboras with the Euphrates (see above); Calno , the later Ctesiphon , on the left bank of the Tigris; Arpad (according to Merâshid , i. p. 47, in the pashalic of Chaleb, i. e. , Aleppo) and Hamath (i. e. , Epiphania) were Syrian cities, the latter on the river Orontes, still a large and wealthy place.
The king of Asshur had also already conquered Samaria, at the time when the prophet introduced him as uttering these words. Jerusalem, therefore, would be unable to resist him. As he had obtained possession of idolatrous kingdoms (ל מעא, to reach, as in Psa 21:9 : hâ - 'elil with the article indicating the genus), which had more idols than Jerusalem or than Samaria; so would he also overcome Jerusalem, which had just as few and just as powerless idols as Samaria had.
Observe there that Isa 10:11 is the apodosis to Isa 10:10, and that the comparative clause of Isa 10:10 is repeated in Isa 10:11, for the purpose of instituting a comparison, more especially with Samaria and Jerusalem. The king of Asshur calls the gods of the nations by the simple name of idols, though the prophet does not therefore make him speak from his own Israelitish standpoint.
On the contrary, the great sin of the king of Asshur consisted in the manner in which he spoke. For since he recognised no other gods than his own Assyrian national deities, he placed Jehovah among the idols of the nations, and, what ought particularly to be observed, with the other idols, whose worship had been introduced into Samaria and Jerusalem. But in this very fact there was so far consolation for the worshippers of Jehovah, that such blasphemy of the one living God would not remain unavenged; whilst for the worshipers of idols it contained a painful lesson, since their gods really deserved nothing better than that contempt should be heaped upon them.
The prophet has now described the sin of Asshur. It was ambitious self-exaltation above Jehovah, amounting even to blasphemy. And yet he was only the staff of Jehovah, who could make use of him as He would.
Isa 10:7-11 Asshur was to be an instrument of divine wrath upon all Israel; but it would exalt itself, and make itself the end instead of the means. Isa 10:7 “Nevertheless he meaneth not so, neither doth his heart think so; for it is in his heart to destroy and cut off nations not a few. ” Asshur did not think so ( lo' - cēn ), i. e. , not as he ought to think, seeing that his power over Israel was determined by Jehovah Himself.
For what filled his heart was the endeavour, peculiar to the imperial power, to destroy not a few nations, i. e. , as many nations as possible, for the purpose of extending his own dominions, and with the determination to tolerate no other independent nation, and the desire to deal with Judah as with all the rest. For Jehovah was nothing more in his esteem than one of the idols of the nations.
Isa 10:8-11 “For he saith, Are not my generals all kings? Is not Calno as Carchemish, or Hamath as Arpad, or Samaria as Damascus? As my hand hath reached the kingdoms of the idols, and their graven images were more than those of Jerusalem and Samaria; shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria and her idols, do likewise to Jerusalem and her idols? ” The king of Asshur bore the title of the great king (Isa 36:4), and indeed, as we may infer from Eze 26:7, that of the king of kings.
The generals in his army he could call kings, because the satraps who led their several contingents were equal to kings in the extent and splendour of their government, and some of them were really conquered kings (cf. , 2Ki 25:28). He proudly asks whether every one of the cities named has not been as incapable as the rest, of offering a successful resistance to him.
Carchemish is the later Circesium (Cercusium), at the junction of the Chaboras with the Euphrates (see above); Calno , the later Ctesiphon , on the left bank of the Tigris; Arpad (according to Merâshid , i. p. 47, in the pashalic of Chaleb, i. e. , Aleppo) and Hamath (i. e. , Epiphania) were Syrian cities, the latter on the river Orontes, still a large and wealthy place.
The king of Asshur had also already conquered Samaria, at the time when the prophet introduced him as uttering these words. Jerusalem, therefore, would be unable to resist him. As he had obtained possession of idolatrous kingdoms (ל מעא, to reach, as in Psa 21:9 : hâ - 'elil with the article indicating the genus), which had more idols than Jerusalem or than Samaria; so would he also overcome Jerusalem, which had just as few and just as powerless idols as Samaria had.
Observe there that Isa 10:11 is the apodosis to Isa 10:10, and that the comparative clause of Isa 10:10 is repeated in Isa 10:11, for the purpose of instituting a comparison, more especially with Samaria and Jerusalem. The king of Asshur calls the gods of the nations by the simple name of idols, though the prophet does not therefore make him speak from his own Israelitish standpoint.
On the contrary, the great sin of the king of Asshur consisted in the manner in which he spoke. For since he recognised no other gods than his own Assyrian national deities, he placed Jehovah among the idols of the nations, and, what ought particularly to be observed, with the other idols, whose worship had been introduced into Samaria and Jerusalem. But in this very fact there was so far consolation for the worshippers of Jehovah, that such blasphemy of the one living God would not remain unavenged; whilst for the worshipers of idols it contained a painful lesson, since their gods really deserved nothing better than that contempt should be heaped upon them.
The prophet has now described the sin of Asshur. It was ambitious self-exaltation above Jehovah, amounting even to blasphemy. And yet he was only the staff of Jehovah, who could make use of him as He would.
Isa 10:7-11 Asshur was to be an instrument of divine wrath upon all Israel; but it would exalt itself, and make itself the end instead of the means. Isa 10:7 “Nevertheless he meaneth not so, neither doth his heart think so; for it is in his heart to destroy and cut off nations not a few. ” Asshur did not think so ( lo' - cēn ), i. e. , not as he ought to think, seeing that his power over Israel was determined by Jehovah Himself.
For what filled his heart was the endeavour, peculiar to the imperial power, to destroy not a few nations, i. e. , as many nations as possible, for the purpose of extending his own dominions, and with the determination to tolerate no other independent nation, and the desire to deal with Judah as with all the rest. For Jehovah was nothing more in his esteem than one of the idols of the nations.
Isa 10:8-11 “For he saith, Are not my generals all kings? Is not Calno as Carchemish, or Hamath as Arpad, or Samaria as Damascus? As my hand hath reached the kingdoms of the idols, and their graven images were more than those of Jerusalem and Samaria; shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria and her idols, do likewise to Jerusalem and her idols? ” The king of Asshur bore the title of the great king (Isa 36:4), and indeed, as we may infer from Eze 26:7, that of the king of kings.
The generals in his army he could call kings, because the satraps who led their several contingents were equal to kings in the extent and splendour of their government, and some of them were really conquered kings (cf. , 2Ki 25:28). He proudly asks whether every one of the cities named has not been as incapable as the rest, of offering a successful resistance to him.
Carchemish is the later Circesium (Cercusium), at the junction of the Chaboras with the Euphrates (see above); Calno , the later Ctesiphon , on the left bank of the Tigris; Arpad (according to Merâshid , i. p. 47, in the pashalic of Chaleb, i. e. , Aleppo) and Hamath (i. e. , Epiphania) were Syrian cities, the latter on the river Orontes, still a large and wealthy place.
The king of Asshur had also already conquered Samaria, at the time when the prophet introduced him as uttering these words. Jerusalem, therefore, would be unable to resist him. As he had obtained possession of idolatrous kingdoms (ל מעא, to reach, as in Psa 21:9 : hâ - 'elil with the article indicating the genus), which had more idols than Jerusalem or than Samaria; so would he also overcome Jerusalem, which had just as few and just as powerless idols as Samaria had.
Observe there that Isa 10:11 is the apodosis to Isa 10:10, and that the comparative clause of Isa 10:10 is repeated in Isa 10:11, for the purpose of instituting a comparison, more especially with Samaria and Jerusalem. The king of Asshur calls the gods of the nations by the simple name of idols, though the prophet does not therefore make him speak from his own Israelitish standpoint.
On the contrary, the great sin of the king of Asshur consisted in the manner in which he spoke. For since he recognised no other gods than his own Assyrian national deities, he placed Jehovah among the idols of the nations, and, what ought particularly to be observed, with the other idols, whose worship had been introduced into Samaria and Jerusalem. But in this very fact there was so far consolation for the worshippers of Jehovah, that such blasphemy of the one living God would not remain unavenged; whilst for the worshipers of idols it contained a painful lesson, since their gods really deserved nothing better than that contempt should be heaped upon them.
The prophet has now described the sin of Asshur. It was ambitious self-exaltation above Jehovah, amounting even to blasphemy. And yet he was only the staff of Jehovah, who could make use of him as He would.
Isa 10:12 And when He had made use of him as He would, He would throw him away. “And it will come to pass, when the Lord shall have brought to an end all His work upon Mount Zion and upon Jerusalem, I will come to punish over the fruit of the pride of heart of the king of Asshur, and over the haughty look of his eyes. ” The “fruit” ( peri ) of the heart’s pride of Asshur is his vainglorious blasphemy of Jehovah, in which his whole nature is comprehended, as the inward nature of the tree is in the fruit which hangs above in the midst of the branches; tiph'ereth , as in Zec 12:7, the self-glorification which expresses itself in the lofty look of the eyes.
Several constructives are here intentionally grouped together (Ges. §114, 1), to express the great swelling of Asshur even to bursting. But Jehovah, before whom humility is the soul of all virtue, would visit this pride with punishment, when He should have completely cut off His work, i. e. , when He should have thoroughly completed ( bizza' , absolvere ) His punitive work upon Jerusalem ( ma‛aseh , as in Isa 28:21).
The prep. Beth is used in the same sense as in Jer 18:23, agere cum aliquo . It is evident that ma‛aseh is not used to indicate the work of punishment and grace together, so that yebazza‛ could be taken as a literal future (as Schröring and Ewald suppose), but that it denotes the work of punishment especially; and consequently yebazza‛ is to be taken as a futurum exactum (cf.
, Isa 4:4), as we may clearly see from the choice of this word in Lam 2:17 (cf. , Zec 4:9).
Isa 10:13-14 When Jehovah had punished to such an extent that He could not go any further without destroying Israel - a result which would be opposed to His mercy and truth - His punishing would turn against the instrument of punishment, which would fall under the curse of all ungodly selfishness. “For he hath said, By the strength of my hand I have done it, and by my own wisdom; for I am prudent: and I removed the bounds of the nations, and I plundered their stores, and threw down rulers like a bull.
And my hand extracted the wealth of the nations like a nest: and as men sweep up forsaken eggs, have I swept the whole earth; there was none that moved the wing, and opened the mouth, and chirped. ” The futures may be taken most safely as regulated by the preterites, and used, like German imperfects, to express that which occurs not once merely, but several times.
The second of these preterites, שׁושׂיתי, is the only example of a poel of verbs ל ה; possibly a mixed form from שׁסס ( poel of שסס) and שהסה ( piel of שסה). The object to this, viz. , ‛athidoth ( chethib ) or ‛athudoth ( keri ), is sometimes used in the sense of τὰ μέλλοντα ; sometimes, as in this instance, in the sense of τὰ ὑπάρχοντα . According to the keri , the passage is to be rendered, “And I, a mighty one, threw down kings” (those sitting on thrones), cabbir being taken in the same sense as in Job 34:17, Job 34:24; Job 36:5.
But the chethib câ'abbı̄r is to be preferred as more significant, and not to be rendered “as a hero” (to which the Caph similitudinis is so little suitable, that it would be necessary to take it, as in Isa 13:6, as Caph veritatis ), but “as a bull,” 'abbı̄r as in Psa 68:31; Psa 22:13; Psa 50:13. A bull, as the excavations show, was an emblem of royalty among the Assyrians.
In Isa 10:14, the more stringent Vav conv. is introduced before the third pers. fem. The Kingdoms of the nations are compared here to birds’ nests, which the Assyrian took for himself ( 'âsaph , as in Hab 2:5); and their possessions to single eggs. The mother bird was away, so that there was not even a sign of resistance; and in the nest itself not one of the young birds moved a wing to defend itself, or opened its beak to scare the intruder away.
Seb. Schmid has interpreted to correctly, “ nulla alam movet ad defendendum aut os aperit ad terrendum . ” Thus proudly did Asshur look back upon its course of victory, and thus contemptuously did it look down upon the conquered kingdoms.
Isa 10:13-14 When Jehovah had punished to such an extent that He could not go any further without destroying Israel - a result which would be opposed to His mercy and truth - His punishing would turn against the instrument of punishment, which would fall under the curse of all ungodly selfishness. “For he hath said, By the strength of my hand I have done it, and by my own wisdom; for I am prudent: and I removed the bounds of the nations, and I plundered their stores, and threw down rulers like a bull.
And my hand extracted the wealth of the nations like a nest: and as men sweep up forsaken eggs, have I swept the whole earth; there was none that moved the wing, and opened the mouth, and chirped. ” The futures may be taken most safely as regulated by the preterites, and used, like German imperfects, to express that which occurs not once merely, but several times.
The second of these preterites, שׁושׂיתי, is the only example of a poel of verbs ל ה; possibly a mixed form from שׁסס ( poel of שסס) and שהסה ( piel of שסה). The object to this, viz. , ‛athidoth ( chethib ) or ‛athudoth ( keri ), is sometimes used in the sense of τὰ μέλλοντα ; sometimes, as in this instance, in the sense of τὰ ὑπάρχοντα . According to the keri , the passage is to be rendered, “And I, a mighty one, threw down kings” (those sitting on thrones), cabbir being taken in the same sense as in Job 34:17, Job 34:24; Job 36:5.
But the chethib câ'abbı̄r is to be preferred as more significant, and not to be rendered “as a hero” (to which the Caph similitudinis is so little suitable, that it would be necessary to take it, as in Isa 13:6, as Caph veritatis ), but “as a bull,” 'abbı̄r as in Psa 68:31; Psa 22:13; Psa 50:13. A bull, as the excavations show, was an emblem of royalty among the Assyrians.
In Isa 10:14, the more stringent Vav conv. is introduced before the third pers. fem. The Kingdoms of the nations are compared here to birds’ nests, which the Assyrian took for himself ( 'âsaph , as in Hab 2:5); and their possessions to single eggs. The mother bird was away, so that there was not even a sign of resistance; and in the nest itself not one of the young birds moved a wing to defend itself, or opened its beak to scare the intruder away.
Seb. Schmid has interpreted to correctly, “ nulla alam movet ad defendendum aut os aperit ad terrendum . ” Thus proudly did Asshur look back upon its course of victory, and thus contemptuously did it look down upon the conquered kingdoms.
Isa 10:15 This self-exaltation was a foolish sin. “Dare the axe boast itself against him that heweth therewith, or the saw magnify itself against him that useth it? As if a staff were to swing those that lift it up, as if a stick should lift up not-wood! ” “ Not-wood ” is to be taken as one word, as in Isa 31:8. A stick is wood, and nothing more; in itself it is an absolutely motionless thing.
A man is “ not-wood ,” an incomparably higher, living being. As there must be “not-wood” to lay hold of wood, so, wherever a man performs extraordinary deeds, there is always a superhuman cause behind, viz. , God Himself, who bears the same relation to the man as the man to the wood. The boasting of the Assyrian was like the bragging of an instrument, such as an axe, a saw, or a stick, against the person using it.
The verb hēnı̄ph is applied both to saw and stick, indicating the oscillating movements of a measured and more or less obvious character. The plural, “those that lift it up,” points to the fact that by Him who lifts up the stock, Jehovah, the cause of all causes, and power of all powers, is intended.
Isa 10:16 There follows in the next v. the punishment provoked by such self-deification (cf. , Hab 1:11). “Therefore will the Lord, the Lord of hosts, send consumption against his fat men; and under Asshur’s glory there burns a brand like a firebrand. ” Three epithets are here employed to designate God according to His unlimited, all-controlling omnipotence: viz.
, hâ'âdōn , which is always used by Isaiah in connection with judicial and penal manifestations of power; and adonâi zebâoth , a combination never met with again, similar to the one used in the Elohistic Psalms, Elohim zebaoth (compare, on the other hand, Isa 3:15; Isa 10:23-24). Even here a large number of codices and editions (Norzi’s, for example) have the reading Jehovah Zebaoth , which is customary in other cases.
Râzōn (Isa 17:4) is one of the diseases mentioned in the catalogue of curses in Lev 26:16 and Deu 28:22. Galloping consumption comes like a destroying angel upon the great masses of flesh seen in the well-fed Assyrian magnates: mishmannim is used in a personal sense, as in Psa 78:31. And under the glory of Asshur, i. e. , its richly equipped army ( câbōd as in Isa 8:7), He who makes His angels flames of fire places fire so as to cause it to pass away in flames.
In accordance with Isaiah’s masterly art of painting in tones, the whole passage is so expressed, that we can hear the crackling, and spluttering, and hissing of the fire, as it seizes upon everything within its reach. This fire, whatever it may be so far as its natural and phenomenal character is concerned, is in its true essence the wrath of Jehovah.
Isa 10:17 “And the light of Israel becomes a fire, and His Holy One a flame; and it sets on fire and devours its thistles and thorns on one day. ” God is fire (Deu 9:3), and light (1Jo 1:5); and in His own self-life the former is resolved into the latter. Kâdōsh (holy) is here parallel to 'ōr (light); for the fact that God is holy, and the fact that He is pure light, are essentially one and the same thing, whether kâdash meant originally to be pure or to be separate.
The nature of all creatures, and of the whole cosmos , is a mixture of light and darkness. The nature of God alone is absolute light. But light is love. In this holy light of love He has given Himself up to Israel, and taken Israel to Himself. But He has also within Him a basis of fire, which sin excites against itself, and which was about to burst forth as a flaming fire of wrath against Asshur, on account of its sins against Him and His people.
Before this fire of wrath, this destructive might of His penal righteousness, the splendid forces of Asshur were nothing but a mass of thistles and a bed of thorns (written here in the reverse order peculiar to Isaiah, shâmı̄r vâshaith ), equally inflammable, and equally deserving to be burned. To all appearance, it was a forest and a park, but is was irrecoverably lost.
Isa 10:18-19 “And the glory of his forest and his garden-ground will He destroy, even to soul and flesh, so that it is as when a sick man dieth. And the remnant of the trees of his forest can be numbered, and a boy could write them. ” The army of Asshur, composed as it was of many and various nations, was a forest ( ya‛ar ); and, boasting as it did of the beauty of both men and armour, a garden ground ( carmel ), a human forest and park.
Hence the idea of “utterly” is expressed in the proverbial “even to soul and flesh,” which furnishes the occasion for a leap to the figure of the wasting away of a נסס ( hap . leg . the consumptive man, from nâsas , related to nūsh , 'ânash , Syr. n‛sı̄so , n‛shisho , a sick man, based upon the radical notion of melting away, cf. , mâsas , or of reeling to and fro, cf.
, mūt , nūt , Arab. nâsa , nâta ). Only a single vital spark would still glimmer in the gigantic and splendid colossus, and with this its life would threaten to become entirely extinct. Or, what is the same thing, only a few trees of the forest, such as could be easily numbered ( mispâr as in Deu 33:6, cf. , Isa 21:17), would still remain, yea, so few, that a boy would be able to count and enter them.
And this really came to pass. Only a small remnant of the army that marched against Jerusalem ever escaped. With this small remnant of an all-destroying power the prophet now contrasts the remnant of Israel, which is the seed of a new power that is about to arise.
Isa 10:18-19 “And the glory of his forest and his garden-ground will He destroy, even to soul and flesh, so that it is as when a sick man dieth. And the remnant of the trees of his forest can be numbered, and a boy could write them. ” The army of Asshur, composed as it was of many and various nations, was a forest ( ya‛ar ); and, boasting as it did of the beauty of both men and armour, a garden ground ( carmel ), a human forest and park.
Hence the idea of “utterly” is expressed in the proverbial “even to soul and flesh,” which furnishes the occasion for a leap to the figure of the wasting away of a נסס ( hap . leg . the consumptive man, from nâsas , related to nūsh , 'ânash , Syr. n‛sı̄so , n‛shisho , a sick man, based upon the radical notion of melting away, cf. , mâsas , or of reeling to and fro, cf.
, mūt , nūt , Arab. nâsa , nâta ). Only a single vital spark would still glimmer in the gigantic and splendid colossus, and with this its life would threaten to become entirely extinct. Or, what is the same thing, only a few trees of the forest, such as could be easily numbered ( mispâr as in Deu 33:6, cf. , Isa 21:17), would still remain, yea, so few, that a boy would be able to count and enter them.
And this really came to pass. Only a small remnant of the army that marched against Jerusalem ever escaped. With this small remnant of an all-destroying power the prophet now contrasts the remnant of Israel, which is the seed of a new power that is about to arise.
Isa 10:20 “And it will come to pass in that day, the remnant of Israel, and that which has escaped of the house of Jacob, will not continue to stay itself upon its chastiser, and will stay itself upon Jehovah, the Holy One of Israel, in truth. ” Behind the judgment upon Asshur there lies the restoration of Israel. “The chastiser” was the Assyrian. While relying upon this, Israel received strokes, because Jehovah made Israel’s staff into its rod.
But henceforth it would sanctify the Holy One of Israel, putting its trust in Him and not in man, and that purely and truly ( be'emeth , “in truth”), not with fickleness and hypocrisy. Then would be fulfilled the promise contained in the name Shear-yashub, after the fulfilment of the threat that it contained.
Isa 10:21 “The remnant will turn, the remnant of Jacob, to God the mighty.” El gibbor is God as historically manifested in the heir of David (Isa 9:6). Whilst Hosea (Hos 3:5) places side by side Jehovah and the second David, Isaiah sees them as one. In New Testament phraseology, it would be “to God in Christ.”
Isa 10:22-23 To Him the remnant of Israel would turn, but only the remnant. “For if thy people were even as the sea-sand, the remnant thereof will turn: destruction is firmly determined, flowing away righteousness. For the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, completes the finishing stroke and that which is firmly determined, within the whole land. ” As the words are not preceded by any negative clause, ci 'im are not combined in the sense of sed or nisi ; but they belong to two sentences, and signify nam si (for if).
If the number of the Israelites were the highest that had been promised, only the remnant among them, or of them ( bō partitive, like the French en ), would turn, or, as the nearer definition ad Deum is wanting here, come back to their right position. With regard to the great mass, destruction was irrevocably determined ( râchatz , τέμνειν, then to resolve upon anything, ἀποτόμως, 1Ki 20:40); and this destruction “overflowed with righteousness,” or rather “flowed on ( shōtēph , as in Isa 28:18) righteousness,” i.
e. , brought forth righteousness as it flowed onwards, so that it was like a swell of the penal righteousness of God ( shâtaph , with the accusative, according to Ges. §138, Anm. 2). That cillâyōn is not used here in the sense of completion any more than in Deu 28:65, is evident from Isa 10:23, where câlâh (fem. of câleh , that which vanishes, then the act of vanishing, the end) is used interchangeably with it, and necherâtzâh indicates judgment as a thing irrevocably decided (as in Isa 28:22, and borrowed from these passages in Dan 9:27; Dan 11:36).
Such a judgment of extermination the almighty Judge had determined to carry fully out ( ‛ōseh in the sense of a fut. instans ) within all the land ( b'kereb , within, not b'thok , in the midst of), that is to say, one that would embrace the whole land and all the people, and would destroy, if not every individual without exception, at any rate the great mass, except a very few.
Isa 10:22-23 To Him the remnant of Israel would turn, but only the remnant. “For if thy people were even as the sea-sand, the remnant thereof will turn: destruction is firmly determined, flowing away righteousness. For the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, completes the finishing stroke and that which is firmly determined, within the whole land. ” As the words are not preceded by any negative clause, ci 'im are not combined in the sense of sed or nisi ; but they belong to two sentences, and signify nam si (for if).
If the number of the Israelites were the highest that had been promised, only the remnant among them, or of them ( bō partitive, like the French en ), would turn, or, as the nearer definition ad Deum is wanting here, come back to their right position. With regard to the great mass, destruction was irrevocably determined ( râchatz , τέμνειν, then to resolve upon anything, ἀποτόμως, 1Ki 20:40); and this destruction “overflowed with righteousness,” or rather “flowed on ( shōtēph , as in Isa 28:18) righteousness,” i.
e. , brought forth righteousness as it flowed onwards, so that it was like a swell of the penal righteousness of God ( shâtaph , with the accusative, according to Ges. §138, Anm. 2). That cillâyōn is not used here in the sense of completion any more than in Deu 28:65, is evident from Isa 10:23, where câlâh (fem. of câleh , that which vanishes, then the act of vanishing, the end) is used interchangeably with it, and necherâtzâh indicates judgment as a thing irrevocably decided (as in Isa 28:22, and borrowed from these passages in Dan 9:27; Dan 11:36).
Such a judgment of extermination the almighty Judge had determined to carry fully out ( ‛ōseh in the sense of a fut. instans ) within all the land ( b'kereb , within, not b'thok , in the midst of), that is to say, one that would embrace the whole land and all the people, and would destroy, if not every individual without exception, at any rate the great mass, except a very few.
Isa 10:24 In these esoteric addresses, whoever, it is not the prophet’s intention to threaten and terrify, but to comfort and encourage. He therefore turns to that portion of the nation which needs and is susceptible of consolation, and draws this conclusion from the element of consolation contained in what has been already predicted, that they may be consoled.
- “Therefore thus saith the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, My people that dwellest in Zion, be not afraid of Asshur, if it shall smite thee with the rod, and lift its stick against thee, in the manner of Egypt. ” “Therefore:” lacēn never occurs in Hebrew in the sense of attamen (Gesenius and Hitzig), and this is not the meaning here, but propterea . The elevating appeal is founded upon what has just before been threatened in such terrible words, but at the same time contains an element of promise in the midst of the peremptory judgment.
The very words in which the people are addressed, “My people that dwelleth on Zion,” are indirectly encouraging. Zion was the site of the gracious presence of God, and of that sovereignty which had been declared imperishable. Those who dwelt there, and were the people of God (the servants of God), not only according to their calling, but also according to their internal character, were also heirs of the promise; and therefore, even if the Egyptian bondage should be renewed in the Assyrian, they might be assured of this to their consolation, that the redemption of Egypt would also be renewed.
“ In the manner of Egypt: ” b'derek Mitzraim , lit. , in the way, i. e. , the Egyptians’ mode of acting; derek denotes the course of active procedure, and also, as in Isa 10:26 and Amo 4:10, the course of passive endurance.
Isa 10:25-26 A still further reason is given for the elevating words, with a resumption of the grounds of consolation upon which they were founded. “For yet a very little the indignation is past, and my wrath turns to destroy them: and Jehovah of hosts moves the whip over it, as He smote Midian at the rock of Oreb; and His staff stretches out over the sea, and He lifts it up in the manner of Egypt.
” The expression “a very little” (as in Isa 16:14; Isa 29:17) does not date from the actual present, when the Assyrian oppressions had not yet begun, but from the ideal present, when they were threatening Israel with destruction. The indignation of Jehovah would then suddenly come to an end ( câlâh za‛am , borrowed in Dan 11:36, and to be interpreted in accordance with Isa 26:20); and the wrath of Jehovah would be, or go, ‛al - tabilthâm .
Luzzatto recommends the following emendation of the text, יתּם על־תּבל ואפּי, “and my wrath against the world will cease,” tēbēl being used, as in Isa 14:17, with reference to the oikoumenon as enslaved by the imperial power. But the received text gives a better train of thought, if we connect it with Isa 10:26. We must not be led astray, however, by the preposition ‛al , and take the words as meaning, My wrath (burneth) over the destruction inflicted by Asshur upon the people of God, or the destruction endured by the latter.
It is to the destruction of the Assyrians that the wrath of Jehovah is now directed; ‛al being used, as it frequently is, to indicate the object upon which the eye is fixed, or to which the intention points (Psa 32:8; Psa 18:42). With this explanation Isa 10:25 leads on to Isa 10:26. The destruction of Asshur is predicted there in two figures drawn from occurrences in the olden time.
The almighty Judge would swing the whip over Asshur ( ‛orer , agitare , as in 2Sa 23:18), and smite it, as Midian was once smitten. The rock of Oreb is the place where the Ephraimites slew the Midianitish king 'Oreb (Jdg 7:25). His staff would then be over the sea, i. e. , would be stretched out, like the wonder-working staff of Moses, over the sea of affliction, into which the Assyrians had driven Israel ( yâm , the sea, an emblem borrowed from the type; see Kohler on Zec 10:11, cf.
, Psa 66:6); and He would lift it up, commanding the waves of the sea, so that they would swallow Asshur. “In the manner of Egypt:” b'derek Mitzraim (according to Luzzatto in both instances, “on the way to Egypt,” which restricts the Assyrian bondage in a most unhistorical manner to the time of the Egyptian campaign) signifies in Isa 10:24, as the Egyptians lifted it up; but here, as it was lifted up above the Egyptians.
The expression is intentionally conformed to that in Isa 10:24 : because Asshur had lifted up the rod over Israel in the Egyptian manner, Jehovah would lift it up over Asshur in the Egyptian manner also.
Isa 10:25-26 A still further reason is given for the elevating words, with a resumption of the grounds of consolation upon which they were founded. “For yet a very little the indignation is past, and my wrath turns to destroy them: and Jehovah of hosts moves the whip over it, as He smote Midian at the rock of Oreb; and His staff stretches out over the sea, and He lifts it up in the manner of Egypt.
” The expression “a very little” (as in Isa 16:14; Isa 29:17) does not date from the actual present, when the Assyrian oppressions had not yet begun, but from the ideal present, when they were threatening Israel with destruction. The indignation of Jehovah would then suddenly come to an end ( câlâh za‛am , borrowed in Dan 11:36, and to be interpreted in accordance with Isa 26:20); and the wrath of Jehovah would be, or go, ‛al - tabilthâm .
Luzzatto recommends the following emendation of the text, יתּם על־תּבל ואפּי, “and my wrath against the world will cease,” tēbēl being used, as in Isa 14:17, with reference to the oikoumenon as enslaved by the imperial power. But the received text gives a better train of thought, if we connect it with Isa 10:26. We must not be led astray, however, by the preposition ‛al , and take the words as meaning, My wrath (burneth) over the destruction inflicted by Asshur upon the people of God, or the destruction endured by the latter.
It is to the destruction of the Assyrians that the wrath of Jehovah is now directed; ‛al being used, as it frequently is, to indicate the object upon which the eye is fixed, or to which the intention points (Psa 32:8; Psa 18:42). With this explanation Isa 10:25 leads on to Isa 10:26. The destruction of Asshur is predicted there in two figures drawn from occurrences in the olden time.
The almighty Judge would swing the whip over Asshur ( ‛orer , agitare , as in 2Sa 23:18), and smite it, as Midian was once smitten. The rock of Oreb is the place where the Ephraimites slew the Midianitish king 'Oreb (Jdg 7:25). His staff would then be over the sea, i. e. , would be stretched out, like the wonder-working staff of Moses, over the sea of affliction, into which the Assyrians had driven Israel ( yâm , the sea, an emblem borrowed from the type; see Kohler on Zec 10:11, cf.
, Psa 66:6); and He would lift it up, commanding the waves of the sea, so that they would swallow Asshur. “In the manner of Egypt:” b'derek Mitzraim (according to Luzzatto in both instances, “on the way to Egypt,” which restricts the Assyrian bondage in a most unhistorical manner to the time of the Egyptian campaign) signifies in Isa 10:24, as the Egyptians lifted it up; but here, as it was lifted up above the Egyptians.
The expression is intentionally conformed to that in Isa 10:24 : because Asshur had lifted up the rod over Israel in the Egyptian manner, Jehovah would lift it up over Asshur in the Egyptian manner also.
Isa 10:27 The yoke of the imperial power would then burst asunder. “And it will come to pass in that day, its burden will remove from thy shoulder, and its yoke from thy neck; and the yoke will be destroyed from the pressure of the fat. ” We have here two figures: in the first ( cessabit onus ejus a cervice tua ) Israel is represented as a beast of burden; in the second ( et jugum ejus a collo tuo ), as a beast of draught.
And this second figure is divided again into two fields. For yâsūr merely affirms that the yoke, like the burden, will be taken away from Israel; but chubbal , that the yoke itself will snap, from the pressure of his fat strong neck against it. Knobel, who alters the text, objects to this on the ground that the yoke was a cross piece of wood, and not a collar.
And no doubt the simple yoke is a cross piece of wood, which is fastened to the forehead of the ox (generally of two oxen yoked together: jumenta = jugmenta , like jugum , from jungere ); but the derivation of the name itself, ‛ol , from ‛âlal , points to the connection of the cross piece of wood with a collar, and here the yoke is expressly described as lying round the neck (and not merely fastened against the forehead). There is no necessity, therefore, to read chebel ( chablo ), as Knobel proposes; chubbal (Arabic chubbila ) indicates her a corrumpi consequent upon a disrumpi .
(On p'nē , vid. , Job 41:5; and for the application of the term mippenē to energy manifesting itself in its effects, compare Psa 68:3 as an example.) Moreover, as Kimchi has observed, in most instances the yoke creates a wound in the fat flesh of the ox by pressure and friction; but here the very opposite occurs, and the fatness of the ox leads to the destruction of the yoke (compare the figure of grafting employed in Rom 11:17, to which Paul gives a turn altogether contrary to nature).
Salvation, as the double turn in the second figure affirms, comes no less from within ( Isa 10:27 ) than from without ( Isa 10:27 ). It is no less a consequence of the world-conquering grace at work in Isaiah, than a miracle wrought for Israel upon their foes. The prophet now proceeds to describe how the Assyrian army advances steadily towards Jerusalem, spreading terror on every hand, and how, when planted there like a towering forest, it falls to the ground before the irresistible might of Jehovah.
Eichhorn and Hitzig pronounce this prophecy a vaticinium post eventum , because of its far too special character; but Knobel regards it as a prophecy, because no Assyrian king ever did take the course described; in other words, as a mere piece of imagination, as Ewald maintains. Now, no doubt the Assyrian army, when it marched against Jerusalem, came from the southwest, namely, from the road to Egypt, and not directly from the north.
Sennacherib had conquered Lachish; he then encamped before Libnah, and it was thence that he advanced towards Jerusalem. But the prophet had no intention of giving a fragment out of the history of the war: all that he meant to do was to give a lively representation of the future fact, that after devastating the land of Judah, the Assyrian would attack Jerusalem.
There is no necessity whatever to contend, as Drechsler does, against calling the description an ideal one. There is all the difference in the world between idea and imagination. Idea is the essential root of the real, and the reality is its historical form. This form, its essential manifestation, may be either this or that, so far as individual features are concerned, without any violation of its essential character.
What the prophet here predicts has, when properly interpreted, been all literally fulfilled. The Assyrian did come from the north with the storm-steps of a conqueror, and the cities named were really exposed to the dangers and terrors of war. And this was what the prophet depicted, looking as he did from a divine eminence, and drawing from the heart of the divine counsels, and then painting the future with colours which were but the broken lights of those counsels as they existed in his own mind.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 10:28-34 Aesthetically considered, the description is one of the most magnificent that human poetry has ever produced. “He comes upon Ayyath, passes through Migron; in Michmash he leaves his baggage. They go through the pass: let Geba be our quarters for the night! Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees. Scream aloud, O daughter of Gallim! Only listen, O Laysha!
Poor Anathoth! Madmenah hurries away; the inhabitants of Gebim rescue. He still halts in Nob today; swings his hand over the mountain of the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem. Behold, the Lord, Jehovah of hosts, lops down the branches with terrific force; and those of towering growth are hewn down, and the lofty are humbled. And He fells the thickets of the forest with iron; and Lebanon, it falls by a Majestic One.
” When the Assyrian came upon Ayyath (= Ayyah , 1Ch 7:28 (?) , Neh 11:31, generally hâ - ‛ai , or 'Ai ), about thirty miles to the north-east of Jerusalem, he trod for the first time upon Benjaminitish territory, which was under the sway of Judaea. The name of this 'Ai, which signifies “stone-heap,” tallies, as Knobel observes, with the name of the Tell el-hagar , which is situated about three-quarters of an hour to the south-east of Beitîn, i.
e. , Bethel. But there are tombs, reservoirs, and ruins to be seen about an hour to the south-east of Beitin; and these Robinson associates with Ai. From Ai, however, the army will not proceed towards Jerusalem by the ordinary route, viz. , the great north road (or “Nablus road”); but, in order to surprise Jerusalem, it takes a different route, in which it will have to cross three deep and difficult valleys.
From Ai they pass to Migron, the name of which has apparently been preserved in the ruins of Burg Magrun , situated about eight minutes’ walk from Beitîn. Michmash is still to be found in the form of a deserted village with ruins, under the name of Muchmâs , on the eastern side of the valley of Migron. Here they deposit their baggage ( hiphkid , Jer 36:20), so far as they are able to dispense with it - either to leave it lying there, or to have it conveyed after them by an easier route.
For they proceed thence through the pass of Michmash, a deep and precipitous ravine about forty-eight minutes in breadth, the present Wady Suweinit. “The pass” ( ma‛bârâh ) is the defile of Michmash, with two prominent rocky cliffs, where Jonathan had his adventure with the garrison of the Philistines. One of these cliffs was called Seneh (1Sa 14:4), a name which suggests es-Suweinit .
Through this defile they pass, encouraging one another, as they proceed along the difficult march, by the prospect of passing the night in Geba, which is close at hand. It is still disputed whether this Geba is the same place as the following Gibeah of Saul or not. There is at the present time a village called Geba' below Muchmâs , situated upon an eminence.
The almost universal opinion now is, that this is not Gibeah of Saul, but that the latter is to be seen in the prominent Tell ( Tuleil ) el-Fûl , which is situated farther south. This is possibly correct. For there can be no doubt that this mountain, the name of which signifies “Bean-hill,” would be a very strong position, and one very suitable for Gibeah of Saul; and the supposition that there were two places in Benjamin named Geba , Gibeah , or Gibeath , is favoured at any rate by Jos 18:21-28, where Geba and Gibeath are distinguished from one another.
And this mountain, which is situated to the south of er-Râm - that is to say, between the ancient Ramah and Anathoth - tallies very well with the route of the Assyrian as here described; whilst it is very improbable that Isaiah has designated the very same place first of all Geba , and then (for what reason no one can tell) Gibeah of Saul. We therefore adopt the view, that the Assyrian army took up its quarters for the night at Geba, which still bears this name, spreading terror in all directions, both east and west, and still more towards the south.
Starting in the morning from the deep valley between Michmash and Geba, they pass on one side of Rama (the present er-Râm ), situated half an hour to the west of Geba, which trembles as it sees them go by; and the inhabitants of Gibeath of Saul, upon the “Bean-hill,” a height that commands the whole of the surrounding country, take to flight when they pass by. Every halting-place on their route brings them nearer to Jerusalem.
The prophet goes in spirit through it all. It is so objectively real to him, that it produces the utmost anxiety and pain. The cities and villages of the district are lost. He appeals to the daughter, i. e. , the population, of Gallim, to raise a far-sounding yell of lamentation with their voice (Ges. §138, 1, Anm. 3), and calls out in deep sympathy to Laysha, which was close by (on the two places, both of which have vanished now, see 1Sa 25:44 and Jdg 18:29), “only listen,” the enemy is coming nearer and nearer; and then for Anathoth ( ‛Anâtâ , still to be seen about an hour and a quarter to the north of Jerusalem) he utters this lamentation (taking the name as an omen of its fate): O poor Anathoth!
There is no necessity for any alteration of the text; ‛anniyâh is an appeal, or rather an exclamation, as in Isa 54:11; and ‛anâthoth follows, according to the same verbal order as in Isa 23:12, unless indeed we take it at once as an adjective written before the noun - an arrangement of the words which may possibly have been admissible in such interjectional sentences. The catastrophe so much to be dreaded by Jerusalem draws nearer and nearer.
Madmenah (dung-hill, see Comm. on Job , at Job 9:11-15) flees in anxious haste: the inhabitants of Gebim (water-pits) carry off their possessions (הּעיז, from עוּז, to flee, related to chush , hence to carry off in flight, to bring in haste to a place of security, Exo 9:19, cf. , Jer 4:6; Jer 6:1; synonymous with hēnı̄s , Exo 9:20; Jdg 6:11; different from ‛âzaz , to be firm, strong, defiant, from which mâ‛oz , a fortress, is derived - in distinction from the Arabic ma‛âdh , a place of refuge: comp.
Isa 30:2, to flee to Pharaoh’s shelter). There are no traces left of either place. The passage is generally understood as implying that the army rested another day in Nob. But this would be altogether at variance with the design - to take Jerusalem by surprise by the suddenness of the destructive blow. We therefore render it, “Even to-day he will halt in Nob” ( in eo est ut subsistat , Ges.
§132, Anm. 1) - namely, to gather up fresh strength there in front of the city which was doomed to destruction, and to arrange the plan of attack. The supposition that Nob was the village of el-'Isawiye , which is still inhabited, and lies to the south-west of Anât, fifty-five minutes to the north of Jerusalem, is at variance with the situation, as correctly described by Jerome, when he says: “ Stans in oppidulo Nob et procul urbem conspiciens Jerusalem .
” A far more appropriate situation is to be found in the hill which rises to the north of Jerusalem, and which is called Sadr , from its breast-like projection or roundness - a name which is related in meaning to nob , nâb , to rise. From this eminence the way leads down into the valley of Kidron; and as you descend, the city spreads out before you at a very little distance off.
It may have been here, in the prophet’s view, that the Assyrians halted. It was not long, however (as the yenōphēph which follows ἀσυνδέτως implies), before his hand was drawn out to strike (Isa 11:15; Isa 19:16), and swing over the mountain of the daughter of Zion (Isa 16:1), over the city of the holy hill. But what would Jehovah do, who was the only One who could save His threatened dwelling-place in the face of such an army?
As far as Isa 10:32 , the prophet’s address moved on at a hurried, stormy pace; it then halted, and seemed, as it were, panting with anxiety; it now breaks forth in a dactylic movement, like a long rolling thunder. The hostile army stands in front of Jerusalem, like a broad dense forest. But it is soon manifest that Jerusalem has a God who cannot be defied with impunity, and who will not leave His city in the lurch at the decisive moment, like the gods of Carchemish and Calno.
Jehovah is the Lord, the God of both spiritual and starry hosts. He smites down the branches of this forest of an army: sē‛ēph is a so-called piel privativum , to lop (lit. to take the branches in hand; cf. , sikkēl , Isa 5:2); and pu'rah = pe'urah (in Ezekiel pō'rah ) is used like the Latin frons , to include both branches and foliage - in other words, the leafy branches as the ornament of the tree, or the branches as adorned with leaves.
The instrument He employs is ma‛arâtzâh , his terrifying and crushing power (compare the verb in Isa 2:19, Isa 2:21). And even the lofty trunks of the forest thus cleared of branches and leaves do not remain; they lie hewn down, and the lofty ones must fall. It is just the same with the trunks, i. e. , the leaders, as with the branches and the foliage, i. e.
, with the great crowded masses. The whole of the forest thicket (as in Isa 9:17) he hews down ( nikkaph , third pers. piel , though it may also be niphal ); and Lebanon, i. e. , the army of Asshur which is now standing opposite to Mount Zion, like Lebanon with its forest of cedars, falls down through a Majestic One ( 'addı̄r ), i. e. , through Jehovah (Isa 33:21, cf.
, Psa 76:5; Psa 93:4). In the account of the fulfilment (Isa 37:36) it is the angel of the Lord ( mal'ach Jehovah ), who is represented as destroying the hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp in a single night. The angel of Jehovah is not a messenger of God sent from afar, but the chosen organ of the ever-present divine power.
Isa 11:1 This is the fate of the imperial power of the world. When the axe is laid to it, it falls without hope. But in Israel spring is returning. “And there cometh forth a twig out of the stump of Jesse, and a shoot from its roots bringeth forth fruit. ” The world-power resembles the cedar-forest of Lebanon; the house of David, on the other hand, because of its apostasy, is like the stump of a felled tree ( geza‛ , truncus , from gâza‛ , truncare ), like a root without stem, branches, or crown.
The world-kingdom, at the height of its power, presents the most striking contrast to Israel and the house of David in the uttermost depth announced in Isa 6:1-13 fin . , mutilated and reduced to the lowliness of its Bethlehemitish origin. But whereas the Lebanon of the imperial power is thrown down, to remain prostrate; the house of David renews its youth. And whilst the former has no sooner reached the summit of its glory, than it is suddenly cast down; the latter, having been reduced to the utmost danger of destruction, is suddenly exalted.
What Pliny says of certain trees, “ inarescunt rursusque adolescunt, senescunt quidem, sed e radicibus repullulant ,” is fulfilled in the tree of Davidic royalty, that has its roots in Jesse (for the figure itself, see F. V. Lasaulx, Philosophie der Geschichte , pp. 117-119). Out of the stumps of Jesse, i. e. , out of the remnant of the chosen royal family which has sunk down to the insignificance of the house from which it sprang, there comes forth a twig ( choter ), which promises to supply the place of the trunk and crown; and down below, in the roots covered with earth, and only rising a little above it, there shows itself a nētzer , i.
e. , a fresh green shoot (from nâtzēr , to shine or blossom). In the historical account of the fulfilment, even the ring of the words of the prophecy is noticed: the nētzer , at first so humble and insignificant, was a poor despised Nazarene (Mat 2:23). But the expression yiphreh shows at once that it will not stop at this lowliness of origin. The shoot will bring forth fruit ( pârâh , different in meaning, and possibly also in root, from pârach , to blossom and bud).
In the humble beginning there lies a power which will carry it up to a great height by a steady and certain process (Eze 17:22-23). The twig which is shooting up on the ground will become a tree, and this tree will have a crown laden with fruit. Consequently the state of humiliation will be followed by one of exaltation and perfection.
Isa 11:2 Jehovah acknowledges Him, and consecrates and equips Him for His great work with the seven spirits. ”And the Spirit of Jehovah descends upon Him, spirit of wisdom and understanding, spirit of counsel and might, spirit of knowledge and fear of Jehovah. ” “The Spirit of Jehovah” ( ruach Yehovah ) is the Divine Spirit, as the communicative vehicle of the whole creative fulness of divine powers.
Then follow the six spirits, comprehended by the ruach Yehovah in three pairs, of which the first relates to the intellectual life, the second to the practical life, and the third to the direct relation to God. For chocmâh (wisdom) is the power of discerning the nature of things through the appearance, and bı̄nâh (understanding) the power of discerning the differences of things in their appearance; the former is σοφία, the latter διάκρισις or σύνεσις.
“Counsel” ( etzâh ) is the gift of forming right conclusions, and “might” ( gebūrâh ) the ability to carry them out with energy. “The knowledge of Jehovah” ( da‛ath Yehovah ) is knowledge founded upon the fellowship of love; and “the fear of Jehovah” ( yir'ath Yehovâh ), fear absorbed in reverence. There are seven spirits, which are enumerated in order from the highest downwards; since the spirit of the fear of Jehovah is the basis of the whole (Pro 1:7; Job 28:28; Psa 111:10), and the Spirit of Jehovah is the heart of all.
It corresponds to the shaft of the seven-lighted candlestick, and the three pair of arms that proceeded from it. In these seven forms the Holy Spirit descended upon the second David for a permanent possession, as is affirmed in the perf. consec . ונהה (with the tone upon the ultimate, on account of the following guttural, to prevent its being pronounced unintelligibly; nuach like καταβαίνειν καὶ μένειν, Joh 1:32-33).
The seven torches before the throne of God (Rev 4:5, cf. , Isa 1:4) burn and give light in His soul. The seven spirits are His seven eyes (Rev 5:6).
Isa 11:3 And His regal conduct is regulated by this His thoroughly spiritual nature. ”And fear of Jehovah is fragrance to Him; and He judges not according to outward sight, neither does He pass sentence according to outward hearing. ” We must not render it: His smelling is the smelling of the fear of God, i. e. , the penetration of it with a keen judicial insight (as Hengstenberg and Umbreit understand it); for hērı̄ach with the preposition Beth has not merely the signification to smell (as when followed by an accusative, Job 39:25), but to smell with satisfaction (like בּ ראה, to see with satisfaction), Exo 30:38; Lev 26:31; Amo 5:21.
The fear of God is that which He smells with satisfaction; it is rēach nı̄choach to Him. Meier’s objection, that fear of God is not a thing that can be smelt, and therefore that hērı̄ach must signify to breathe, is a trivial one. Just as the outward man has five senses for the material world, the inner man has also a sensorium for the spiritual world, which discerns different things in different ways.
Thus the second David scents the fear of God, and only the fear of God, as a pleasant fragrance; for the fear of God is a sacrifice of adoration continually ascending to God. His favour or displeasure does not depend upon brilliant or repulsive external qualities; He does not judge according to outward appearances, but according to the relation of the heart to His God.
Isa 11:4-5 This is the standard according to which He will judge when saving, and judge when punishing. “And judges the poor with righteousness, and passes sentence with equity for the humble in the land; and smites the earth with the rod of His mouth, and with the breath of His lips He slays the wicked. And righteousness is the girdle of His loins, and faithfulness the girdle of His hips.
” The main feature in Isa 11:4 is to be seen in the objective ideas. He will do justice to the dallim , the weak and helpless, by adopting an incorruptibly righteous course towards their oppressors, and decide with straightforwardness for the humble or meek of the land: ‛ânâv , like ‛ânı̄ , from ‛ânâh , to bend, the latter denoting a person bowed down by misfortune, the former a person inwardly bowed down, i.
e. , from all self-conceit ( hōcı̄ach l' , as in Job 16:21). The poor and humble, or meek, are the peculiar objects of His royal care; just as it was really to them that the first beatitudes of the Sermon on the Mount applied. But “the earth” and “the wicked” (the latter is not to be understood collectively, but, as in several passages in the Old Testament, viz.
, Psa 68:22; Psa 110:6; Hab 3:13-14, as pointing forward prophetically to an eschatological person, in whom hostility towards Jehovah and His Anointed culminates most satanically) will experience the full force of His penal righteousness. The very word of His mouth is a rod which shatters in pieces (Psa 2:9; Rev 1:16); and the breath of His lips is sufficient to destroy, without standing in need of any further means (2Th 2:8).
As the girdle upon the hips ( mothnaim , lxx την̀ ὀσφύν), and in front upon the loins ( chălâzaim , lxx τὰς πλευράς), fastens the clothes together, so all the qualities and active powers of His person have for their band tzedâkâh , which follows the inviolable norm of the divine will, and hâ'emūnâh , which holds immovably to the course divinely appointed, according to promise (Isa 25:1). Special prominence is given by the article to 'emūnâh ; He is the faithful and true witness (Rev 1:5; Rev 3:14).
Consequently with Him there commences a new epoch, in which the Son of David and His righteousness acquire a world-subduing force, and find their home in a humanity that has sprung, like Himself, out of deep humiliation.