Isaiah
10:1
Woe to those who enact evil statutes and to those who constantly
record unjust decisions,: (Woe: Isa 3:11 5:8,11,18,20-22
Jer 22:13 Hab 2:6,9,12,15,19 Mt 11:21 Mt 23:13-16,23,27,29 26:24 Lk
11:42-44,46,47,52 Jude 1:11)(those: 1Ki 21:13 Esther 3:10-13 Ps
58:2 94:20,21 Da 6:8,9 Mic 3:1-4,9-11 Mic 6:16 Jn 9:22 19:6)
|
ISAIAH |
Judgment &
Character
of God |
Comfort &
Redemption
of God |
Uzziah
Jotham
Ahaz
1-12 |
13-27 |
28-35 |
Hezekiah's
Salvation &
Blessing
36-39 |
True God
40-48 |
Suffering
Messiah
49-57 |
Reigning
Lord
58-66 |
Prophecies
Regarding
Judah &
Jerusalem
Is 1:1-12:6 |
Prophecies
Against
the Nations |
Warnings
& Promises |
Historical
Section |
Redemption
Promised:
Israel's
Deliverance |
Redemption
Provided:
Israel's
Deliverer |
Redemption
Realized:
Israel's
Glorious
Future |
|
Prophetic |
Historic |
Messianic |
|
Holiness,
Righteousness & Justice of Jehovah |
Grace, Compassion
& Glory of Jehovah |
God's Government
"A throne" Is 6:6 |
God's Grace
"A Lamb" Is 53:7 |
Time
740-680BC |
MESSAGE TO THE
NORTHERN KINGDOM
CONCLUDES
Isaiah 9:8-10:4
To help keep this chapter in
context observe the preceding table and the following outline adapted
from Talk Thru the Bible which summarizes the first section of Isaiah
dealing primarily with prophecies concerning the Kingdom of Judah...
Prophecies against Judah
Isaiah 1:1-12:6
A The Judgment of Judah Isa 1:1–31
B The Day of the Lord Isa 2:1–4:6
C The Parable of the Vineyard Isa 5:1–30
D The Commission of Isaiah Isa 6:1–13
E The Destruction of Israel by Assyria Isa 7:1–10:4
1 Sign of Immanuel Isa 7:1–25
2 Sign of Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz Isa 8:1–22
3 Prophecy of the Messiah’s Birth Isa 9:1–7
4 Judgment on Ephraim Isa 9:8–10:4
F The Destruction of Assyria by God
Isa 10:5–12:6
1 Destruction of Assyria Isa
10:5–19
2 Remnant of Israel Isa 10:20–34
3 Restoration of the Messiah’s Kingdom Isa 11:1–16
4 Thanksgiving in the Messiah’s Kingdom Isa 12:1–6
Note that some commentators feel
that Isaiah is now addressing the Southern Kingdom (H A Ironsides, New
American Commentary, Albert Barnes), but there is no indication
that he has switched from speaking about the Northern Kingdom (which
is the approach taken by these notes).
And so Isaiah 10:1-4 closes out
this section
addressed to the Northern Kingdom (also known as Jacob, Israel,
Ephraim) which begins in Isaiah 9:8 and
is divided into 4 subsections (Isa 9:8-12, 13-17, 18-21, 10:1-4)
each ending with the same refrain...
In spite of
all this His anger does not turn away,
And His hand is still stretched out.
(Isaiah 9:12, 17, 21, 10:4)
When the message to the
Northern Kingdom is concluded, Isaiah then takes us his prophetic
discourse (it was all prophecy at the time Isaiah spoke it but is
largely history to us today) dealing with God's use of the Assyrian
Empire to punish the Southern Kingdom, followed by His prediction of
Assyria's demise because of her arrogance and pride. This section
extends from Isaiah 10:4 through Isaiah 10:34 and prepares us for the
rise of the greatest kingdom of all,
Messiah's Millennial Kingdom,
beginning in Isaiah 11:1ff.
Alexander summarizes
Isaiah 10...
Isaiah 10:1-4 - The prophet
first completes his description of the prevalent iniquity, with
special reference to injustice and oppression, as a punishment of
which he threatens death and deportation by the hands of the
Assyrians.
Isaiah 10:5-15 - He then
turns to the Assyrians themselves, God's chosen instruments, whom He
had commissioned against Israel to punish and degrade it, but whose
own views were directed to universal conquest, to illustrate which,
the Assyrian himself is introduced as boasting of his tributary
princes and his rapid conquests, which had met with no resistance from
the people or their gods, and threatening Judah with a like fate,
unaware of the destruction which awaits himself, imputing his success
to his own strength and wisdom, and glorying, though a mere created
instrument, over his maker and his mover.
Isaiah 10:20-23 - His
approaching doom is then described under the figure of a forest
suddenly and almost totally consumed by fire, Isaiah 10:16-19. This
succession of events is to have the effect of curing the propensity to
trust in man rather than God, at least among the elect remnant who
survive; for only a remnant shall escape God's righteous judgments.
Isaiah 10:24-34 - To these
the prophet now addresses words of strong encouragement, with a
renewed prediction of a judgment on Assyria, similar to that on Midian
at Oreb, and on Egypt at the Red sea, which is then described, in the
most vivid manner, by an exhibition of the enemy's approach, from post
to post, until he stands before Jerusalem, and then, with a resumption
of the metaphor before used, his destruction is described as the
prostration of a forest -- trees and thickets -- by a might axe. (The
Prophecies of Isaiah)
Amplified Version...
WOE TO those [judges] who issue
unrighteous decrees, and to the magistrates who keep causing unjust
and oppressive decisions to be recorded,
Woe (1945) (hoy)
means alas! Ho! Woe is an interjection, an exclamation of
grief, regret, anguish, pain or distress or a denouncement. Hoy was used sometime to
attract attention (Isa 55:1) Hoy was used in funeral laments
(1Ki 13:30, Jer 22:18, 34:5) and carries the connotation of death,
something Israel would soon experience at the hand of he Assyrians.
Hoy - 47v in NAS. 21
uses are found in Isaiah! - 1Kgs 13:30; Isa 1:4, 24; 5:8, 11, 18,
20, 21, 22; 10:1, 5; 17:12; 18:1; 28:1; 29:1, 15; 30:1; 31:1; 33:1;
45:9, 10; 55:1; Jer 22:13, 18; 23:1; 30:7; 34:5; 47:6; 48:1; 50:27;
Ezek 13:3, 18; 34:2; Amos 5:18; 6:1; Mic 2:1; Nah 3:1; Hab 2:6, 9, 12,
15, 19; Zeph 2:5; 3:1; Zech 2:6f; 11:17
Eerdman's Dictionary adds
that woe...
predominately occurs in prophetic
speeches, usually in a series of such utterances, and signals an
announcement of impending destruction. The distinguishing feature of
the woe oracle is the opening interjection, “Woe to…,” which is
followed by the description of evil deeds and a prediction of divine
judgment (Isa 5:8, 9, 10; Mic 2:1-5).
PERVERSION OF
JUSTICE & RIGHTEOUSNESS
Woe to those who enact evil
statutes - More literally "Woe [to] those who decree evil
decrees." These are evil judges, legislators and leaders who are
unrighteous. This and subsequent passages describe abuse of power and
it inevitably calls forth divine displeasure.
J Vernon McGee comments
that...
This verse is very much up-to-date.
I think we are seeing the working out of this in our contemporary
culture, because the courts are to hand down justice and mirror the
justice of God, and they don’t. Lawlessness abounds. People sink into
degradation. The idea of freedom has been distorted. Every criminal
who is arrested ought to be given a fair trial but in order that my
family and your family can walk the streets in peace, criminals will
have to be punished. Many who are guilty of crimes are set free by a
softhearted, softheaded judge. That judge is not giving justice to me
and my family or to you and your family....
One of the leading political
analysts in this country recently stated on a telecast that every
program that has been devised to help the poor has hurt the poor. What
is wrong? The only One who will give justice to the poor is God.
Judges are supposed to represent God on earth. Today many godless men
are judges. They are in no position to judge at all until they
recognize that they are representing God....
It is a farce to have a man put his
hand on the Bible and take an oath in a court of law today, because
most judges do not believe it is the Word of God. The lawyers, the
jury, and the men who are taking the oath probably do not believe it
is God’s Word. When you don’t believe it, you might as well take an
oath on a Sears and Roebuck catalog. Some of them may have more
respect for that than they do for the Bible.
God is dealing with principles;
and, until a judge represents God, he cannot represent the people. We
have gotten so far from this concept that I am sure I sound like a
square! And that’s what I am....
God is saying to the judges, “You
are to represent Me, and the day is coming when I am going to judge
you.” I feel that every judge ought to recognize the fact that he is
one day going to stand before God and give an account of how he has
handled his responsibility here on earth. Judges in our day seem to
have bleeding hearts; they want to show mercy to the poor criminal.
Well, they should be meting out justice to both rich and poor. In the
day of reckoning, the unjust judges will stand before the Just Judge.
Failed leadership has been
addressed in Isaiah 9:13-17, but in more general terms as those who
misled the people. Now the indictment is very specific pointing out
their "blatant misrule, the willful making of decrees in the interest
of class-division and personal advantage." (Motyer)
Evil (0205)('aven)
in its most basic sense has "two facets: a stress on trouble which
moves on to wickedness, and an emphasis on emptiness which moves on to
idolatry." (TWOT
NET translates this
verse...
Those who enact unjust policies are
as good as dead, those who are always instituting unfair regulations
Comment: Beloved, does this
sound like any modern government you know, where liberal judges
frequently overturn just, generally conservative decisions! It was
"Woe" to Israel and it is "Woe" to any country that emulates Israel's
unfair governmental practices! Pray for revival beloved.
To those who constantly
record unjust decisions - More literally "to the writers who
write out harm." where the Hebrew verb form suggests this to be a
repetitive action.
Unjust (05999) (amal)
primarily describes toil or painful labor and comes to mean misery,
anguish, troublesome work, trouble, labor, toil. It describes that
which is an unpleasant, hard, distressing. Some versions translate
amal in this passage with grievousness, which is that which is
characterized by severe pain, suffering or sorrow. The point is clear
that the wicked leads were writing and enacting laws which abused the
people they should have comforted and protected. The fact that verse 4
discusses their "wealth", strongly implies that the leaders (judges,
magistrates, etc) were using the legal system to "line their pockets"
with filthy lucre!
Matthew Henry...
Whether they were the princes and
judges of Israel of Judah, or both, that the prophet denounced this
woe against, is not certain
Isaiah
10:2 So as to deprive the needy of justice and rob the poor of My people of
their rights, so that widows may be their spoil and that they may
plunder the orphans.:
(deprive: Isa 29:21 La 3:35 Am 2:7 5:11,12 Mal 3:5 ) (widows:
Isa 1:23 3:14 5:7 Jer 7:6 Eze 22:7 Mt 23:14)
So as to deprive the needy of
justice - In Isa 10:1 and this passage the general sin that is
denounced is that of oppression and injustice.
Needy (01800) (dal)
means one who is low, especially the lower classes of society (2Ki
24:14, 25:12). Feeble, weak, helpless. "Those of humble rank and
circumstances; who have no powerful friends and defenders." (Barnes)
TWOT adds that
dal denotes the lack of
material wealth (Pr 10:15) and social strength (Amos 2:7). Such people
are contrasted with the rich (Ex 30:15; Ru 3:10) and the great (Lev
19:5). God enjoins their protection (Ex 23:3; Lev 14:21; Isa 10:2),
and promises to them justice (Isa 11:4). Only infrequently is dal used
of spiritual poverty (cf. Jer 5:4), and in most cases such usages
parallel ebyôn, needy (Isa 14:30).
Isaiah had castigated
unrighteous rulers (not those in Israel but in Judah) in the first
chapter writing...
Your rulers are rebels and
companions of thieves; Everyone loves a bribe And chases after
rewards. They do not defend the orphan, Nor does the widow’s plea come
before them. (Isa 1:23)
Rob (01497) (gazal)
has a root meaning of violence that goes beyond mere stealing or
taking another's belongings but includes robbing by force.
Poor (06041) (ani)
means poor, afflicted, humble. The
Septuagint (Lxx)
translates with the
adjective
ptochos
(from
ptosso = crouch, cringe, cower down or hide oneself for fear, a
picture of one crouching and cowering like a beggar with a tin cup to
receive the pennies dropped in!)
which describes a person who is
dependent on others for support. Ptochos
is an adjective which describes one
who crouches and cowers and is used as a noun to mean beggar.
These poor were unable to meet their basic needs and so were forced to
depend on others or on society.
Classical
Greek used the ptochos to refer to a person reduced to total
destitution, who crouched in a corner begging. As he held out one hand
for alms he often hid his face with the other hand, because he was
ashamed of being recognized.
Plunder the orphans (cp
Isa 1:17) - The verb plunder means to take by violence
and may be literally true but could also be a picture of how they
violated justice.
Utley...
Things are so upside down that the
very ones YHWH seeks to protect (i.e., widows and orphans) have become
the spoil and plunder! (Ref)
John Martin writes
that...
These actions, which involved
taking advantage of people who could not defend their rights, violated
God’s Law (Ex. 22:22; 23:6; Dt. 15:7, 8; 24:17, 18; cf. Isa. 1:17).
Malachi sounds a similar
warning and sums up the root problem as an absence of a (reverential)
fear of Jehovah....
“Then I will draw near to you for
judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the sorcerers and
against the adulterers and against those who swear falsely, and
against those who oppress the wage earner in his wages, the widow and
the orphan, and those who turn aside the alien and do not fear Me,”
says the Lord of hosts. (Mal 3:5).
Barnes comments that...
The widow and the orphan
are without protectors. Judges, by their office, are particularly
bound to preserve their rights; and it, therefore, evinces peculiar
iniquity when they who should be their protectors become, in fact,
their oppressors, and do injustice to them without the possibility of
redress. Yet this was the character of the Jewish judges; and for this
the vengeance of Heaven was about to come upon the land. (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
Isaiah
10:3
Now what will you do in the day of punishment, and in the devastation
which will come from afar? To whom will you flee for help? And where
will you leave your wealth?: (what: Isa 20:6 33:14 Job
31:14 Jer 5:31 Eze 24:13,14 Rev 6:15,16)(day: Isa 26:21 Ho 9:7
Lk 19:44 1Pe 2:12)(devastation: Isa 5:26 30:27,28 39:3,6,7 Dt
28:49) (to whom: Isa 30:1-3,16 31:1-3 Ho 5:13) (where:
Isa 2:20,21 5:14 Ge 31:1 2Ki 7:6-8,15 Ps 49:16,17 Pr 11:4 Zep 1:18)
CRIME
AND
PUNISHMENT
Now what will you do in the
day of punishment - The first of a series of rhetorical questions
each calling for a
negative reply. Isaiah addressing the wicked leaders directly warns
them that the day of reckoning ("judgment day") cannot be averted or
avoided. This series of questions clearly imply that the
calamity would be so great that there would be no refuge, or escape.
The day of punishment is
translated by some versions as “the day of visitation” (KJV) which is
the day when God arrives to execute justice (cp Job 31:14;
35:15) in the form of Assyrian oppression for the oppressors of
the poor and needy. The Pulpit Commentary notes that...
The day of visitation is the
day when God reckons with his servants, and demands an account from
each of the work done in his vineyard, being prepared to recompense
the good and punish the bad (comp. Hos. 9:7). It is oftenest used in a
bad sense because, unhappily, so many more are found to deserve
punishment than reward.
The devastation which will
come from afar - The punishment threatened is desolation by a
foreign foe. Things might seem to be just fine in the land of Ephraim,
but that belied the truth that an outside foe would soon wreak havoc.
God is not mocked and what Israel had sown was soon to be reaped (Gal
6:7-note,
Gal 6:8-note).
Devastation (07722) (so'ah
- feminine form) means ruin, desolation or devastation, which can
be sudden or unexpected (as something crashing - Cheyne calls it "the
crashing ruin") such as the arrival of a disastrous storm (so'ah =
"storm" in Ezek 38:9). It describes that which is laid waste by
plundering or destroying and implies a complete ruin of the affected
area. In Zeph 1:15, this word describes the dreadful
Day of the Lord. The
storms of war were stirring and would soon sweep over the Northern
Kingdom (722BC).
This prediction is not just
desolation but describes sudden, and complete destruction.
So'ah - 12v in the KJV -
Job 30:3, 14; 38:27; Ps 35:8, 17; 63:9; Pr 1:27; 3:25; Isa 10:3;
47:11; Ezek 38:9; Zeph 1:15. KJV = desolation 5, destruction 3,
desolate 2, destroy 1, storm 1, wasteness 1
From afar - Refers to the
Assyrian Empire (map of Assyria)
which were well known in the ancient world as some of most violent and
savage forces that had ever been know. For example in Wikipedia
we read that some of their acts of brutality included...
rape, mutilating men until death,
placing heads, arms, hands and even lower lips on the conquered city's
walls, skulls and noses atop stakes. Alternatively these could also be
piled up or even their corpses cut up and fed to the dogs. On some
occasions, people were blinded so that as they wandered throughout the
land they would speak of Assyrian terrors and demoralize the local
population. (Military
history of the Assyrian Empire)
Boyd describes the brutality
of the Assyrians...
The Assyrian Kingdom became one of
Israel’ s mightiest, most brutal foes. It was a nation with the
highest culture, a highly formal religion, and skilled in the crafts
and arts of mankind, but was unmercifully cruel in its punishment of
its enemies. Their acts were atrocious. King Ashurnasirpal (883–859
BC) was its great leader of expansion. His armies of bowmen, spearmen,
slingers, cavalry and charioteers made up one of the most feared and
dreaded units of military might of that day. Such was what the prophet
Nahum had in mind (Nah 2:3, 4; 3:2, 3).
Ashurnasirpal described his
dealings with a certain city he had conquered as follows: “Six
hundred of their warriors I put to the sword; 3000 captives I burned
with fire; I left not a single one among them alive to serve as a
hostage. Kholai, their governor, I captured alive. Their corpses I
piled into heaps; their men and maidens I burned in the fire; Khulai,
their governor, I flayed and his skin I spread upon the wall of the
city of Damdamusa; the city I destroyed, I ravaged, I burned with
fire.” (Assyrian
Brutality -- By Bob Boyd)
To whom will you flee for
help? - Another rhetorical question calling for a negative reply.
There will be no one to rescue or defend from the foreign foe. They
had sown the rotten seeds of failing to help the helpless and would
reap their bitter harvest of helplessness in the face of the onslaught
of the notoriously brutal Assyrian forces. The
ESV Study Bible has an
interesting note that "Corrupt wealth buys helplessness."
There is a tragic irony for the
only Refuge is the very One Who brought the devastation through His
instrument Assyria.
Clarke comments...
As the people had hitherto lived
without God in worship and obedience; so they should now be without
His help, and should perish in their transgressions. (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
There is also a twist of irony
in the questions in this passage for it is as if he is asking
“When you have forsaken others in
their time of need, who will you go to for help when you are in need?”
And where will you leave your
wealth? (cp Ps 49:17) - A final rhetorical question. Where will
your ill-gotten gain be safe and secure? There was no bank or safe
that could keep their wealth safe, for the land would be devastated by
the ferocious Assyrian forces. When God's hand of judgment falls on
Israel, all the wealth these leaders had gained through corrupt,
unjust methods would vanish like the wind, reminding us of truths in
other Scriptures...
When you set your eyes on it, it is
gone. For wealth certainly makes itself wings, like an eagle that
flies toward the heavens. (Pr 23:5)
Those who want to get rich fall
into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which
plunge men into ruin and destruction. (1Ti 6:9)
Wealth (03519) (kabod)
means to be heavy or weighty but only rarely used literally. Kabod can
describe the glory of God (Ex 16:7, 10, 24:17, 33:18), but in the
present context describes wealth as that which is valued (cp Ge 31:1;
Na 2:9).
Hosea has a parallel
passage...
As for Ephraim, their glory
will fly away like a bird— No birth, no pregnancy and no conception!
(Hos 9:11).
The psalmist writes...
For (explaining why not to be
fearful or in awe of the rich - Ps 49:16) when he dies he will
carry nothing away; His glory will not descend after him. (Ps 49:17)
Warren Wiersbe has a
great application point for this verse writing that...
The prophet’s three questions in
Isaiah 10:3 ought to be pondered by every person who wants to be ready
when the Lord comes. If God cannot bring us to repentance through His
Word, then He must lift His hand and chasten us. If we do not submit
to His chastening, then He must stretch out His hand and judge us. God
is long-suffering, but we dare not tempt Him by our careless or
calloused attitude. “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of
the living God” (Heb. 10:31).
Isaiah
10:4
Nothing remains but to crouch among the captives or fall among the
slain. In spite of all this, His anger does not turn away and His hand
is still stretched out.: (Lev 26:17,36,37 Dt 31:15-18 32:30 Jer
37:10 Ho 9:12)(all this: Isa 5:25 9:12,17,21)( rod: Isa 10:15
8:4 14:5,6 Ps 17:14 125:3 Jer 51:20-24)
Nothing remains but to crouch
among the captives or fall among the slain - Bow as a captive to
the foreign invaders or be slain by them. Go into captivity or fall in
battle.
Crouch (03766) (kara)
means to bow down and can refer both to bending in general or to
bowing in worship or obeisance (attitude of deference). Some uses
clearly refer to kneeling (2Ki 1:13, Jdg 7:6).
It is interesting to note that
another Hebrew verb shachah could also mean to bowing down to
pay homage. Shachah however is often translated worship, or to show
reverential respect by bowing down before a superior, the first use in
Ge 22:5 being by Abraham who is going to worship Jehovah. But
here in Isaiah 10:4 Isaiah does not use shachah but kara
which never translated worship in the NAS. So what is the point? Since
the leaders refused to bow down in worship (shachah) before Jehovah,
they would be forced to bow before pagan invaders in humiliation and
subjugation. Beloved, who
do you bow before?
Guzik comments that...
When the Assyrians conquered other
nations, it wasn’t enough for them to just win a military victory.
They had a perverse pleasure in humiliating and subjugating their
conquered foes. They would do everything they could to bring them low.
Here, God says, “You have rejected Me, so without Me you shall bow
down in humiliation and degradation before your enemies.” (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
ESV Study Bible adds
that...
In his writings, the Assyrian king
Shalmaneser III boasted of stacking the corpses of his defeated
enemies and heaping up piles of their skulls (cf. Nah. 3:3). To give
up in the face of such an enemy is profound despair. (ESV
Study Bible)
In spite of all this, His
anger does not turn away and His hand is still stretched out -
This is the fourth time this sad refrain has occurred
(Isaiah 9:12, 17, 21, 10:4) and marks the close of the prophecy of
divine judgment on the Northern Kingdom.
This is a fascinating refrain
given the fact that this passage describes what would seem to be final
punishment (especially "fall among the slain" = death)
Guzik commenting on the
fourth use of this phrase...
reminds us that God’s judgment is
persistent. It moves from phase to phase until it finds repentance.
This means that it makes sense for us to repent now, because God’s
judgment is persistent for all eternity.
“If even physical death does not
satisfy the fierce anger of this holy God, what dread and punishment
lies beyond the grave?” (Grogan)
It makes perfect sense for this
message of coming judgment to follow the announcement of the Messiah.
His coming was announced, but the people were not ready for Him, and
the predicted judgment would come before they were ready. (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
Isaiah
10:5
Woe to Assyria, the rod of My anger and the staff in whose hands is My
indignation,: (Assyria: Ge 10:11)
THE
FALL OF THE
BOASTFUL ASSYRIAN EMPIRE
Isaiah 10:5-34
Woe - see note on
Isaiah 10:1
see note
Young comments that...
All that we do has been
foreordained of God, and to Him we are responsible. When we are
employed in some momentous task we should look to Him and acknowledge
His greatness for using us as He has. This Assyria did not do. Puffed
up with pride, she thought that she was conducting affairs in
accordance with her own wishes. Instead of recognizing the sovereignty
of God, she believed herself to be sovereign...When a nation is thus
charged with the execution of God’s wrath and looks not to God, it
itself can only become the object of woe. (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
Assyria - God's rod
and staff. Solomon explains that...
Jehovah has made everything for its
own purpose, Even the wicked for the day of evil. (Pr 16:4)
Vine comments that...
Verses 5 to 19 give a striking
example of how God has used gentile nations to chastise His earthly
people, permitting these nations to attain to a high degree of
domination. They on their part have prided themselves on what they
consider to be their own attainments, and on this account have brought
upon themselves the retributive judgments of the Lord.
Click
map of Assyria -
the river nearest to Israel is the Euphrates. Observe in the
legend the striking expansion of the boundaries that occurred the
years 824BC and 671BC. Observe that Judah is not
green
but
yellow
- while the Northern Kingdom whose capital was Samaria was eventually
defeated by Assyria, the Assyrian advances on Judah did not result in
her defeat - Why? God's protective hand was on Judah. He would
eventually use Nebuchadnezzar as His servant [Jer 25:9, 27:6, 43:10]
to defeat and demolish Judah and Jerusalem in 586BC.
Beloved if God is in control of
kingdoms rising and falling, what is there in your life which you
think is beyond His control? And remember His timing is not
necessarily your timing!)
The rod of My anger -
While God is not the Author of evil, He does on occasion use wicked
men and nations to punish even His own people when they fall into sin
and idolatry. When this punishment is completed, however, those evil
kingdoms or individuals inevitably meet even more severe judgments
(Isaiah 10:12). So while Assyria was His primary rod for punishing the
Northern Kingdom, Babylon was the primary instrument He used to punish
the Southern Kingdom, the prophet Habakkuk recording...
For behold, I am raising up the
Chaldeans, that fierce and impetuous people who march throughout the
earth to seize dwelling places which are not theirs. (Hab 1:6, cp 2Chr
36:17, Jer 25:9).
Rod (07626)(shebet)
is literally a club or heavy blunt wooden stick as a weapon to
kill by striking the victim or opponent (2Sa 23:21; 1Ch 11:23) and
in the present context refers (figuratively) to the nation of Assyria
as God's "rod of discipline" with which He judges Israel.
Anger (0639) (ap)
means nose and thus depicts hard breathing or nasal snorting that
accompanies exasperation. In short, ap therefore describes
anger which is felt as an emotion. It is the Lord's anger which
empowers Assyria to be His rod of discipline on His people.
Henry Morris has an
interesting comment on Assyria...
As in many of the prophecies, there
is to be both a precursive fulfillment, in this case the coming
invasion of Israel and Judah by the unspeakably cruel and wicked
Assyrians, and a final fulfillment, the northern invaders of Israel in
the last days, as described particularly in Ezekiel 38. The term
"Assyrian" seems, in fact, to be a title of the coming Antichrist
(Micah 5:5,6).
This One (Messiah) will be our
peace (cp Prince of peace Isa 9:6). When the Assyrian
invades our land, when he tramples on our citadels, then we will raise
against him seven shepherds and eight leaders of men. 6 They will
shepherd the land of Assyria with the sword, The land of Nimrod at its
entrances; And He will deliver us from the Assyrian When he attacks
our land And when he tramples our territory. (Mic 5:5-6).
Comment: While not everyone
would agree that Micah's prophecy describes the future Antichrist,
Micah's prediction of Israeli victory over Assyria has never been
historically fulfilled and does leave open this fulfillment as a
distinct possibility that it refers to the last days. Morris
commenting on Micah's prophecy writes
Since Assyria was the chief threat
to Judah at the time Micah was writing, many expositors assume that "the
Assyrian" in this verse is simply a metaphor for all her enemies.
The context in this passage, however, is strongly Messianic and
prophetic, and Assyria was a dead nation long before even the first
coming of Christ. With this context in mind, it seems most likely that
"the Assyrian" here is a name for the Antichrist of the last days, the
leader of the last great invasion of Israel before the second coming
of Christ. He is an Assyrian not by nationality (the Assyrians of
antiquity have long vanished from history) but by geography, since his
capital will be at restored Babylon (Zechariah 5:5-11). In the last
days, "the Assyrian" (or Antichrist, or the Beast) will be seeking to
establish his world government and especially to eliminate the nation
Israel and all Christians in every nation. At that time, this
particular prophecy will become clear. There has been no historical
fulfillment of this prophecy as yet, which makes it even more obvious
that the major context of this whole section must relate to the
future. At that time, the Lord will raise up leaders--perhaps from
Israel--to organize escape routes and resistance to the Assyrian's
armies and death squads.
Gaebelein adds that the
ancient Assyrian invasion from the North was a foreshadowing of a
greater "King of the North"
This is an interesting and
important chapter (Isaiah 10). The Assyrian enemy was used by God to
punish His people....In Isaiah 10 we read a fuller description of this
great troubler and how he invaded the land of Israel. God addresses
him as the rod He uses in anger against His people. While all this had
a past fulfilment a similar invasion of the land of Palestine
will be enacted before the times of the Gentiles close and the King of
Kings appears. The "Assyrian" of the end time comes from the North;
therefore he is called in Daniel’s prophecy “the King of the North.”
Antiochus Epiphanes is a type of this final outward foe of Israel.
Study carefully with this chapter Is 14:24–25; Is 30:31–33; Micah
5:1–7; Daniel 8:23-26; 11:40–45; Psalm 74:1–10; Psalm 89. Jehovah
shall suddenly make an end of him. Verses 33–34 compare with Daniel
11:45. (Commentary
on Isaiah - Annotated Bible)
Isaiah
10:6
I send it against a godless nation and commission it against the
people of My fury to capture booty and to seize plunder, and to
trample them down like mud in the streets.: (against: Isa 9:17
19:17 29:13 30:9-11 33:14 Jer 3:10 4:14 Mt 15:7)(commission: Isa
10:13,14 37:26,27 41:25 45:1-5 Jer 25:9 34:22 47:6,7)(trample
them:
Heb. lay them a treading, Isa 22:5 63:3,6 2Sa 22:43 Mic 7:10 Zec 10:5)
GOD'S
SOVEREIGNTY
OVER ALL NATIONS
I send it - God in His
Sovereignty
sends his instrument
Assyria against His people. Assyria's invasion was not a chance
happening. In fact nothing occurs "by chance." There surely is some
play on words for Isaiah himself had been sent to God's people (Isaiah
6:8-note).
A godless nation -
("defiled"; ASV = "profane"; NAB = "impious"; NCV = "separated from
God") A profane, sinning nation who were once called "My people."
Beloved I cannot read this
phrase without great remorse as I contemplate the United States of
America and the continual attempts by godless men and women to
completely remove every reference to God and God's Word from our
country! Woe! Lord, revive the remnant while there is still time to
repent! Amen.
The people of My fury
(Literally, "the people of My anger") - These are the people who
justly deserve or merit God's anger. This phrase summarizes why God is
sending the Assyrians -- He is angry with His rebellious, faithless
people. Beloved, let us learn from these passages -- God is never
mocked. If we sow seeds of willful sin, we will surely reap the Lord's
rod of discipline! We never sin in a vacuum. We never sin and "get
away with it." God's chosen people are a powerful demonstration of
this principle. This is why Paul writes...
Now these things happened
(referring to events in the OT - see 1Co 10:1, 2, 3, 4, 5) as
examples for us, that we should not crave evil things, as they
also craved....Now these things happened to them as an example,
and they were written for our instruction, upon whom the ends of the
ages have come. (1Cor 10:6, 11)
Comment: May God grant us
the grace to read and heed God's clear OT warnings! Amen
Isaiah
10:7
Yet it does not so intend, nor does it plan so in its heart, but
rather it is its purpose to destroy and to cut off many nations.: (Intend:
Ge 50:20 Mic 4:11,12 Ac 2:23 13:27-30)(Heart: Isa 36:18-20 37:11-13)
Rather it is its purpose
- "It...Its" refers to the Assyrian empire and "its purpose" was to serve
as Jehovah's instrument of punishment. This is a clear indicator that
God is in control of history. He is
Sovereign, a truth some believers
struggle with but one which is incredibly comforting when it fully
received. If He were not sovereign, how could the Bible make
statements like those in Ge 50:20 and Ro 8:28-note?
So the purpose of
Assyria was to serve as God's instrument of punishment for His rebellious chosen
people. As Young puts it "In God’s hand the Assyrian was an
unconscious and unwitting instrument."
Solomon reminds us that
The king's heart (Ed: Yes,
mysteriously [to me], even
wicked pagan kings like those of the evil empire Assyria) is like channels of water in the
hand of the LORD; He turns it wherever He wishes. (Pr 21:1)
ESV Study Bible note...
God uses human evil for his own
just purpose, but he does not need humans to intend their cooperation.
Events unfold through human intentions but also, more deeply, through
the divine intention (cf. Luke 22:22; Acts 2:22, 23; 4:27,28). (ESV
Study Bible)
Isaiah
10:8
For it says, "Are not my princes all kings?: (Isa 36:8 2Ki
18:24 19:10 Eze 26:7 Da 2:37)
It says - Referring to
Assyria who is personified as asking this question. As someone has
said in this section on Assyria, we gain great insight into the heart
of a dictator.
Are not my princes all kings?
- The NLT translates is as "Each of my princes will soon be a king."
The implication would be that Assyria would conquer sufficient nations
and the kings of those nations would now be subject ("princes") to the
king of Assyria (cp 2Ki 25:28). Oswalt has a different
interpretation that "He is so great that even his “commanders” are the
equivalent of the kings of other lands." The main point is that Assyria
is saying he was unstoppable.
Isaiah
10:9
"Is not
Calno (Calneh) like
Carchemish, or
Hamath like
Arpad, or
Samaria like
Damascus?: (Calno: Am 6:1,2)(Carchemish: 2Ch 35:20 Jer 46:2)(Hamath:
Isa 36:19 37:13 2Sa 8:9 2Ki 17:24 Jer 49:23) (Samaria: Isa 7:8 17:3
2Ki 16:9 17:5,6 18:9,10)
The boasting of Assyria
continues as it revels in its conquests over fortresses. At this time Samaria (capital
of the Northern Kingdom) had not fallen but in this passage is treated
as if it had already fallen to Assyria.
NET Bible Note comments
that...
The city states listed here were
conquered by the Assyrians between 740–717BC. The point of the
rhetorical questions is that no one can stand before Assyria’s might.
Utley has a historical
note...
a. Calno (or Calneh), city
in northern Syria (cf. Amos 6:2) fell in 742 B.C. (all these dates are
estimates only) b. Carchemish, major city of the Hittites near
the headwaters of the Euphrates, joined Assyrian coalition in 738 B.C.
c. Hamath, city on the northern boundary of Israel (cf. 2Chr.
8:4) on the Orontes River, fell in 738 BC d. Arpad, city in
northwest Syria fell in 741 BC e. Samaria (capital of Israel)
fell in 722 BC to Sargon II f. Damascus (capital of Syria) fell
in 732 B.C. (Ref)
Isaiah
10:10 As my hand has reached to the kingdoms of
the idols, whose graven images were greater than those of Jerusalem
and Samaria: (the
kingdoms: Isa 10:14 2Ki 18:33-35 19:12,13,17-19 2Ch 32:12-16,19)
As my hand... - The
Assyrian boast continues. We see similar boasting by the Assyrian
commander
Rabshakeh in Isa 36:13-20; 37:8-13.
Idols (0457)('eliyl)
means worthless (e.g., those who perform their job poorly - Job 13:4,
Zech 11:17). 'Eliyl refers to that which is worthless as an
object of worship. The idea is that which is good for nothing, vain or
vanity, of no value, a thing of naught. 'Eliyl is used primarily to
describe vain objects of worship, i.e. the gods of this world, whether
literal idols made with hands, riches, or deceitful men. The irony of
this is biting not only with respect to the usual meaning of this word
but also in view of its similarity to the usual word for God ('Elohim).
The Lxx translates with the rare adjective gluptos which
means "carved" and thus describes carved images (eg Dt 7:5, 25 "graven
images" = gluptos, Isa 46:1 = "images"; Isa 48:5 = "graven image").
Utley comments that
images...
is an interesting word (BDB 47).
Its basic meaning is uncertain, but it is spelled similarly to Elohim
('eliyl), which has caused scholars to assume it refers to weak
and non-existent idols (cf. NIDOTTE, vol. 1, p. 411). Monotheism is
the uniqueness of Israel’s faith. There are other spiritual beings,
but only one true God (cf. Dt 4:35,39; 6:8; 32:39; Isa 43:9, 10, 11;
45:21, 22; Jer 2:11; 5:7,10; Ro 3:30; 1Co 8:4,6; 1Ti 2:5; Jas 2:19).
The idols represent nothing, only the false hopes and
fears (superstitions) of fallen humanity realizing there is more
to reality than the physical, but unable to comprehend spiritual truth
(i.e., revelation). (Reference)
(Bolding added)
Isaiah
10:11
Shall I not do to Jerusalem and her images just as I have done to
Samaria and her idols?": (Shall I not do: Isa 36:19,20
37:10-13)
Shall I not do to Jerusalem
and her images - A rhetorical question. Notice the contemptuous, boastful blasphemy of
Assyria in equating Jerusalem's God, the one true and Living God, with
idols ("her images").
Images (KJV = "idols")
(0457)('eliyl) - see previous verse.
This verse concludes the
comparison which began in verse 10. Assyria is personified as saying
that it had defeated kingdoms who possessed idols far greater than
those in Jerusalem (pagans did not believe in the Living God, Who they
classified as one amongst a other gods, who they equated with idols).
Assyria reasoned that since it had defeated greater "images...and
idols" (Isa 10:10), they would surely defeat Jerusalem (representative of the
Southern Kingdom of Judah).
We encounter an example of an
allusion to the idols of conquered countries in the taunting words of
the Assyrian commander
Rabshakeh which were
later addressed to Judah.
Has any one of the gods (idols) of
the nations delivered his land from the hand of the king of Assyria?
Where are the gods of Hamath and Arpad? Where are the gods of
Sepharvaim, Hena and Ivvah? Have they delivered Samaria from my hand?
‘Who among all the gods of the lands have delivered their land from my
hand, that the Lord should deliver Jerusalem from my hand?’ (2Ki
18:33-35).
Isaiah
10:12
So it will be that when the Lord has completed all His work on Mount
Zion and on Jerusalem. He will say, "I will punish the fruit of the
arrogant heart of the king of Assyria and the pomp of his
haughtiness.": (when the Lord: Isa 10:5,6 14:24-27 27:9
46:10,11 Ps 76:10 1Pe 4:17)(I will: Isa 10:16-19,25-34 17:12-14 29:7,8
30:30-33 31:5-9 37:36-38 50:11 Jer 50:18)(punish: Isa 9:9 Job
40:11,12 Ps 21:10 Mt 12:33 15:19) (the pomp: Isa 2:11 5:15 Ps 18:27 Pr
30:13 Eze 31:10,14 Da 4:37)
So it will be that when the
Lord has completed all His work - His work of punishment although
not a complete defeat of Judah and Jerusalem at the hands of the Assyrians.
Completed (01214) (batsa')
is a technical term used by weavers to designate the action of cutting
a piece of cloth free from the loom after it has been woven. The idea
is to ‘snip off’ a thread and hence ‘to terminate’.
Young has an interesting
comment which seems to see the completion of the Lord's work as not
just fulfilled in past history but as also having a future
fulfilment...
The persecution of Zion and
Jerusalem represents in essence the substance of all the persecutions
that would come upon the Church (Ed: I would favor end times
persecution on the nation of Israel, cp Jer 30:7, Da 12:1-note,
et al), and the declaration and description of this punishment prepare
the way for the announcement of the coming of the end of the days, the
period of blessing to be ushered in by the Messiah (Ed:
Second Coming). (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
Comment: Although I would
not agree with Young that the Church in this present age has replaced
Israel (see discussion of the phrase
Israel of God),
I do agree with his interpretation of Isaiah 10:12a having a past and
a future fulfillment and that the return of the King of kings (Rev
19:16-note)
will be the ultimate time "when the Lord has completed all His Work on
Mt Zion and Jerusalem."
On Mount Zion and on
Jerusalem - This refers to the Assyrian invasion of the Southern
Kingdom which ultimately will be defeated by Babylon.
I will punish the fruit of
the arrogant heart of the king of Assyria and the pomp of his
haughtiness - Yes God had used evil Assyria for His holy purposes
but they would afterward be held accountable to God (Assyria fell in
612BC).
Motyer notes that...
What the king of Assyria did
conformed to the will of God; why he did it had nothing to do with the
will of God, only with the king’s arrogance and vaingloriousness.
(The
Prophecy of Isaiah: An Introduction & Commentary) (Logos)
Isaiah
10:13 For he has said, "By the power of my hand
and by my wisdom I did this, for I have understanding; and I removed
the boundaries of the peoples and plundered their treasures, and like
a mighty man I brought down their inhabitants: (He has said: Isa 10:8
37:23,24 Dt 8:17 Eze 25:3 26:2 28:2-9 29:3 Da 4:30 Am 6:13 Hab 1:16)(removed:
2Ki 15:29 17:6,24 18:11,32 1Ch 5:26 Am 5:27 6:1,2)(plundered:
2Ki 16:8 18:15 Ho 13:15,16)
For -
Term of explanation.
Isaiah 10:13,14 help to amplify our understanding of the Assyrian
king's arrogant heart and pomp of his haughtiness.
By the power of my hand and
by my wisdom I did this - The king of Assyria took the glory to
himself and boasted that his conquests were the result of his power
and his wisdom! Pride is a most deceptive sin, even when it is not very
subtle! The Assyrian's declaration is almost identical to the arrogant
boast expressed years later by King
Nebuchadnezzar...
The king reflected and said, 'Is
this not Babylon the great, which I myself have built as a royal
residence by the might of my power and for the glory of my majesty?'
(Da 4:30)
Isaiah
10:14
And my hand reached to the riches of the peoples like a nest, and as
one gathers abandoned eggs, I gathered all the earth; and there was
not one that flapped its wing or opened its beak or chirped.": (And
my: Isa 5:8 Job 31:25 Pr 18:12 21:6,7 Ho 12:7,8 Na 2:9-13 3:1 Hab
2:5-11)
Assyria's boasting
continues (count the number of personal pronouns in Isa 10:13, 14!). Other nations were like so many unguarded bird's eggs
before Assyria's power. Or at least that is the inflated opinion
Assyria possessed and projected.
IVP Background Commentary
adds that...
The arrogant claims put in the
mouth of the Assyrian king by Isaiah is not at all exaggerated. The
royal inscriptions of these kings are extreme in the claims they
arrogate to the king. Tiglath-Pileser declares himself beloved of the
gods, light of all his people and shepherd of humankind, who subdued
many kings, despoiled cities and imposed tribute. He claimed that he
considered his enemies mere ghosts. (Matthews, V. H., Chavalas, M. W.,
& Walton, J. H. The IVP Bible Background Commentary: Old Testament.
Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press)
Isaiah
10:15
Is the axe to boast itself over the one who chops with it? Is the saw
to exalt itself over the one who wields it? That would be like a club
wielding those who lift it, or like a rod lifting him who is not wood.: (axe:
Isa 10:5 Ps 17:13,14 Jer 51:20-23 Eze 28:9 Ro 9:20,21)
Application: Beloved, we who
are God's workmanship
(Ep 2:10-note)
must be careful not to take credit for what God does through us for He
will not share His glory with another!
(Isa 42:8, cp Mt 5:16-note
"in such a way" that He alone receives the glory)
Now comes the indictment of the
pride of Assyrian king, who is metaphorically compared to an axe,
a saw, a club, and a rod, mere "tools" as it were
in the hand of the Almighty God. Clearly, Assyria did
not act independently of the
Sovereign God.
As John Calvin said...
Whenever men ascribe to themselves
more than is proper, they rise against God.
Is the axe to boast itself
over the one who chops with it? - This (and the next) question is
rhetorical and calls for a negative response.
That would be like a club
wielding those who lift it or like a rod lifting him who is not wood
- This exaggeration shows now ludicrous it would be for an axe to
boast or a saw to exalt itself, referring to how ridiculous it was for
the king of Assyria to make these claims.
Oswalt...
God said he would cut down the
“forest” of Judah’s pride (Isa 6:13), and Assyria is the “ax”
in God’s hand to accomplish that task. God also said that He would
punish his people for their sin (Isa 5:25), and Assyria is the
instrument of that punishment. (Ibid)
Isaiah
10:16
Therefore the Lord, the GOD of hosts, will send a wasting disease
among his stout warriors; and under his glory a fire will be kindled
like a burning flame.: (Lord of hosts: Isa 5:17 14:24-27 29:5-8
37:6,7,29,36 2Ch 32:21 Ps 106:15 Ac 12:23)(under: Isa 9:5 30:30-33
33:10-14)
Therefore - And oh what a
conclusion it is! The Assyrian king's pompous puffed up pride would be
punctured by a wasting (Hebrew = leanness) disease among the stout
(Hebrew = fat) warriors (note pun = leanness sent to "fat"
warriors), who were the main source of the empire's seeming
invincibility.
Lord -
Adonai - My Lord, My Master
Lord, the GOD of hosts
(repeated in Isaiah 10:16, 23, 24, 33) - This name speaks of God as
Master and as over the armies (hosts), so that He is in control. The
ESV Study Bible has an interesting explanation of why this unusual
name is concentrated in verses 16-34 commenting that...
God moves history to preserve his
remnant people. Isaiah marks this section with the Lord God of hosts.
(ESV
Study Bible)
(God) Will send (cp "I
send" in Is 10:6) - God was in total control of Assyria's fate.
His glory - The glory of
Assyria. Man's glory is "flammable" and easily consumed by the fire of
God.
A fire will be kindled -
Fire is used metaphorically to describe the complete destruction of
whatever is burned. In this case the fuel for the fire would be the
Assyrian Empire which would be completely consumed by the
"conflagration."
Delitzsch comments
that...
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.
Isaiah
10:17
And the light of Israel will become a fire and his Holy One a flame,
and it will burn and devour his thorns and his briars in a single day.: (light:
Isa 60:19 Ps 27:1 84:11 Rev 21:23 22:5)(flame: Isa 30:27,28 33:14
64:1,2 66:15,16,24 Nu 11:1-3 16:35 Ps 18:8 Ps 21:9 50:3 83:14,15 Jer
4:4 7:20 Mal 4:1-3 Mt 3:12 2Th 1:7-9 Heb 12:29)(devour: Isa 27:4 37:36
Ps 97:3 Na 1:5,6,10)
GOD
IS A
CONSUMING FIRE
The light of Israel -
Notice that some translations (NIV, NLT, Amplified) capitalize "Light"
indicating they consider this to be God. In context that seems to be
the correct interpretation (cp 1Jn 1:5).
The NET Bible note agrees
adding that...
In this context the “Light of
Israel” is a divine title (note the parallel title “his holy
one”). The title points to God’s royal splendor, which overshadows
and, when transformed into fire, destroys the “majestic glory” of the
king of Assyria (Isa 10:16b).
Motyer refers us to a
number of OT passages that discuss the Lord as Light
Ps 27:1-note;
P 84:11-note; Is. 60:1, 2, 3, 19, 20; Mic 7:8
(Ed: cp Ps 36:9-note,
Hab 3:4, Rev 22:5-note). Light symbolizes
God’s favor (Ps 4:7-note), guidance (Ps 43:3-note), law (Ps 119:105-note),
revelation of truth (Is 42:6) and presence (Ps 104:2-note; Is 4:5).
The light which in its fullest sense is yet to come (Isa 9:1, 30:26)
is already present. In the darkness of calamity, faith walks in the
light. For the link between light and holiness see Isa 6:3. There ‘glory’
expressed the presence of the Lord in all His glory in every place;
here light is the presence of the Lord in all His unapproachable
holiness.
(The
Prophecy of Isaiah: An Introduction & Commentary) (Logos)
Will become a fire -
Metaphor of God as a consuming fire, a description that refers
to God later in Isaiah -- Isaiah 29:6, Isa 30:27, 30. Clearly this
picture of God as a fire is an affirmation of an omnipotent God Who
possesses power to destroy His adversaries. In Daniel we see God's
power over nations...
And it is He who changes the times
and the epochs; He removes kings and establishes kings; He gives
wisdom to wise men, And knowledge to men of understanding. (Da 2:21-note)
The writer of Hebrews rightly
says that our God is a consuming fire. (Heb 12:29-note)
Comment: Beloved aren't we
glad the writer said He is our God! While this awesome
description of God cause us to reverentially fear Him, we can know
that He is our God, because the Lamb has been offered up as a whole
burnt offering to the propitiate the wrath of God against sin. Because
Christ was consumed by the wrath of God poured out on Calvary, we who
are safe in Christ, need never fear experiencing His consuming fire.
In the first Biblical
description of God as a consuming power we read
to the eyes of the sons of Israel
the appearance of the glory of the LORD was like a consuming fire on
the mountain top. (Ex 24:17)
Moses describes God as...
the LORD your God is a consuming
fire, a jealous God. (Dt 4:24)
Criswell comments: God's
jealousy is the other side of His love. It is the zeal with which He
seeks to maintain His relationship with those He loves. God's jealousy
has been called "the basic element in the whole OT idea of God."
Because God loves Israel, He will not tolerate losing their loyalty to
another, for this would break the covenant and keep Israel from
blessing and prosperity.
Later Moses describes God
functioning as Israel's warrior against her enemies (much like what He
is doing here in Isaiah 10:17ff)...
Know therefore today that it is the
LORD your God who is crossing over before you as a consuming fire.
He will destroy them and He will subdue them before you, so that you
may drive them out and destroy them quickly, just as the LORD has
spoken to you. (Dt 9:3)
Holy One - This is one of
Isaiah’s favorite titles for God and used some 29x out of 58 total
uses in the OT. It pictures the Lord as the
Sovereign
King Who rules
over His covenant people and exercises moral authority over them.
Holy One - 29x (out of
56x in the entire OT) - Isa 1:4; 5:19, 24; 10:17, 20; 12:6; 17:7;
29:19, 23; 30:11, 12, 15; 31:1; 37:23; 40:25; 41:14, 16, 20; 43:3, 14,
15; 45:11; 47:4; 48:17; 49:7; 54:5; 55:5; 60:9, 14.
His thorns...his briars -
Figurative description of the Assyrian king and his empire which would
be destroyed just as easily as a fire destroys thorns and briars.
IN A
SINGLE DAY
Judah's enemy Assyria would be
destroyed in a single day (cp same phrase referring to what Assyria
would do to Israel!). In the days of
King Hezekiah of Judah,
the Assyrian forces invaded Judah and seemed ominously close to
defeating Jerusalem (even as they had boasted they would do in Isaiah
10:10, 11). And yet here in Isaiah 10:16, 17 through the prophet
Isaiah God promises protection for Judah and Jerusalem. And later
Isaiah records the details of God's hand of protection over Judah and
Jerusalem...
Therefore, thus says the LORD
concerning the king of Assyria, 'He shall not come to this city, or
shoot an arrow there; neither shall he come before it with a shield,
nor throw up a mound against it. 34 'By the way that he came, by the
same he shall return, and he shall not come to this city,' declares
the LORD. 35 'For I will defend this city to save it for My own sake
and for My servant David's sake.'" 36 Then the
Angel of the LORD
(compare to the Light of Israel,
the Holy One") went out, and struck 185,000 in the camp of the
Assyrians; and when men arose early in the morning, behold, all of
these were dead (fulfillment of Isaiah's prediction of destruction of the
Assyrian forces
in a single day). 37 So
Sennacherib, king of
Assyria, departed and returned home, and lived at
Nineveh. (Isaiah
37:33-37)
The parallel account of the
Holy One's protection of Jerusalem and Judah is recorded in Second
Kings...
Therefore thus says the LORD
concerning the king of Assyria, "He shall not come to this city or
shoot an arrow there; neither shall he come before it with a shield,
nor throw up a mound against it. 33 "By the way that he came, by the
same he shall return, and he shall not come to this city,"' declares
the LORD. 34 'For I will defend this city to save it for My own sake
and for My servant David's sake.'" 35 Then it happened that night that
the
Angel of the LORD
went out, and struck 185,000 in the
camp of the Assyrians; and when men rose early in the morning, behold,
all of them were dead (The Angel "destroyed every mighty warrior,
commander and officer in the camp of the king of Assyria." 2Chr
32:21). 36 So
Sennacherib king of Assyria departed and
returned home, and lived at
Nineveh. 37 And it came about as he was
worshiping in the house of
Nisroch his god, that
Adrammelech and
Sharezer killed him with the sword
("some of his own children killed him" 2Chr 32:21); and they
escaped into the land of Ararat. And
Esarhaddon his son became king in his place. (2Kings
19:32-37)
Isaiah
10:18
And He will destroy the glory of his forest and of his fruitful
garden, both soul and body, and it will be as when a sick man wastes
away.: (destroy: Isa 10:33,34 9:18 2Ki 19:23,28
Jer 21:14 Eze 20:47,48)
Isaiah uses a number of phrases (glory of his [Assyria's] forest...fruitful
garden... soul
and body...a sick man) to picture the thoroughness of His
divine decree to destroy Assyria.
Isaiah
10:19
And the rest of the trees of his forest will be so small in number
that a child could write them down.: (small: Isa 37:36)
Rest (07605)(sear/shear)
refers to a remnant of something, in the present case a remnant of the
Assyrian empire that remains after their divinely decreed destruction
takes place. Sear/shear is a key word in this section of
Isaiah's prophecy being found some 6 times (out of a total of 25 uses
in the OT!) in two chapters (Isa 10:19, 20, 21, 22;11:11,16). In
Isaiah 14:22 the prophet uses sear/shear to refer to
Babylon
("survivors"), in Isaiah 16:14 to
Moab, in Isaiah 17:3
to Aram and in Isaiah 21:17 to
Kedar (A powerful
tribe in Northern Arabia).
The trees of the forest...so
small in number -
This metaphor (trees) refers to Assyria's soldiers, following the
intervention by the Angel of Jehovah who struck 185,000 soldiers (Isa
37:36) How high can a child count?
The NLT paraphrase helps
understand the sense of this passage...
Of all that glorious forest, only a
few trees will survive—so few that a child could count them!
Isaiah
10:20
Now in that day the remnant of Israel, and those of the house of Jacob
who have escaped, will never again rely on the one who struck them,
but will truly rely on the LORD, the Holy One of Israel.: (remnant:
Isa 1:9 4:2,3 6:13 37:4,31,32 Ezr 9:14 Ro 9:27-29)(Never: 2Ki 16:7 2Ch
28:20 Ho 5:13 14:3)(Rely: Isa 17:7,8 26:3,4 48:1,2 50:10)
IS THIS SECTION
AN EXAMPLE OF
"DOUBLE REFERENCE"?
Let's look at some background
information to help understand to what "double reference" refers. This
is not an attempt to convince you of the authenticity or veracity of
this principle but to help you understand what the theologians mean
when they use this terminology.
One of the foremost scholars of
Bible prophecy Dr John Walvoord (now with the Lord) explains
that...
Prophecies sometimes have more than
one fulfillment. This is referred to as the law of double reference.
It is not unusual in Scripture for a prophecy to be partially
fulfilled early and then later have a complete fulfillment.
Accordingly, what seems to be a partial fulfillment of a prophecy
should not be assumed to be the final answer as the future may record
a more complete fulfillment. (The
Prophecy Knowledge Handbook All the Prophecies of Scripture Explained
in One Volume or
Logos)
(Bolding added)
Comment: Some writings use
the term "double fulfillment" rather than "double reference". In
fairness, it should also be clearly stated that not all Biblical
scholars (Milton Terry in Biblical Hermeneutics, Puritan John Owen,
Bishop J C Ryle), espouse this principle in the interpretation
of Scripture. These notes are not going to resolve this debate.
Suffice it to say, this website does believe that some passages have a
near and future fulfillment.
David Jeremiah has a well
done article (cost to view entire article but gives annual access to
1000's of conservative theological articles) in which he summarizes
the main points of the "law of double reference"...
1. In double reference prophecy,
the first fulfillment of the prophecy usually is found in a person or
event close in time to the prophetic utterance.
2. In double reference prophecy,
the first fulfillment is usually only a partial fulfillment of the
total prophetic message.
3. In double reference prophecy,
the ultimate fulfillment is usually found in the person of Christ or
the affairs of His kingdom.
Double fulfillment is particularly
true of the predictions…concerning the Babylonian Captivity, the event
of the day of the Lord, the return from Babylon, the world-wide
dispersion of Israel, and their future regathering from all the
corners of the earth… (Charles Feinberg)
4. In double reference prophecy,
the first fulfillment is usually temporal, whereas, the ultimate
fulfillment may be spiritual or eternal.
5. In double reference prophecy,
part of the prophetic message may be fulfilled close at hand, and that
fulfillment in turn becomes another prophecy. A. J. Gordon says,
“Prophecy has no sooner become history, than history in turn becomes
prophecy.”
6. In double reference prophecy,
two or more prophecies may be grouped together in one area of vision,
although they are really at different distances in fulfillment.
7. In double reference prophecy,
observations 5 and 6 are usually found to be working in the same
passage.
There are many other terms beside
“double reference” which are used by various writers and theologians
to describe what has been set forth in the seven observations we have
just discussed. In most cases, the following terms are used
interchangeably with “double reference” and may be understood to stand
for any or all of the parts of the law: Near and Far View, Double
Sense, Multiple Fulfillment, Gap Prophecy, Foreshortening, and several
others.
There are two terms which need
special mention here. “Compenetration” is a term used by Catholic
writers to define what they understand by this law of double
reference. “In an Old Testament passage, the near meaning and the
remote meaning for the New Testament so compenetrate that the passage
at the same time and in the same word refers to the near and the
remote New Testament meaning.”...
A double fulfillment prophecy loses
not one bit of its literalness when it is fulfilled the second or
third time. This would violate our basic system of hermeneutics.
“Double fulfillment is literal fulfillment and therefore consistent
with basic rules of interpretation.”
The law of double reference is not
the Pandora’s Box of Biblical Hermeneutics as some opponents would
claim. It is the failure of many to distinguish application from
interpretation that has caused such an accusation to be leveled at the
principle. To accept the law of double reference as a legitimate tool
for interpretation of prophecy is not to open the door to all kinds of
fanciful notions as to the hidden and allegorical meanings that might
be alluded to in a prophetic passage.
To speak of the law of double reference is to speak of interpretation,
not application. Double reference is not one interpretation and
manifold applications. It is one message for two audiences separated
in time....
How can you tell if a prophetic
statement has more than one fulfillment? These suggestions may help:
1. Determine if the prophecy has
been fulfilled in its literal and complete meaning. Elsa Raud makes
the following comment: "We can know whether or not the law of double
reference applies to the prophecy we are reading by ascertaining
whether it has been fulfilled completely and literally. Genesis 12:3
says that “in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed.” All
the families of the earth have not yet experienced the blessing in
Christ which the promise declares…. Only a comparatively few Jews and
Gentiles have thus been blessed in Him. The prophecy in Genesis 12:3
will be fulfilled for all the families of the earth in the Day of the
Lord."
2. If the prophecy seems to have a
double or wider meaning, examine that meaning only after you have
carefully worked out the primary interpretation of the prophecy. What
you understand by the first fulfillment will color your understanding
of the second or ultimate fulfillment.
3. Look for some interpretive
comment from the New Testament writers to aid your interpretation of
the secondary or ultimate meaning.
4. If the understanding you get
from the ultimate fulfillment is not completely in accord with that
which is directly revealed concerning the person or event, reject it.
Start over! In no case does our knowledge of a future event or person
depend solely on the information contained in a double reference
prophecy. (The
Principle of Double Fulfillment in Interpreting Prophecy)
Dwight Pentecost has
succinctly defined this "double sense" principle in interpretation of
prophecy writing that...
Few laws are more important to
observe in the interpretation of prophetic Scriptures than the law
of double reference. Two events, widely separated as to the time
of their fulfillment, may be brought together into the scope of
prophecy. Two events, widely separated as to the time of their
fulfillment, may be brought together into the scope of one prophecy.
This was done because the prophet had a message for his own day as
well as for a future time. By bringing two widely separated events
into the scope of the prophecy both purposes could be fulfilled. Horne
says:
The same prophecies frequently have
a double meaning, and refer to different events, the one near, the
other remote; the one temporal, the other spiritual or perhaps
eternal. The prophets thus having several events in view, their
expressions may be partly applicable to one, and partly applicable to
another, and it is not always easy to make the transitions. What has
not been fulfilled in the first, we must apply to the second; and what
has already been fulfilled, my often be considered as typical of what
remains to be accomplished.
It was the purpose of God to give
the near and far view so that the fulfillment of the one should be the
assurance of the fulfillment of the other. (Things
to Come: A Study in Biblical Eschatology. See Page 46)
The fact that part of the prophecy
has been fulfilled without the fulfillment of the rest of it does not
argue for a figurative or non-literal method of fulfillment of that
unfulfilled portion, but such a partial fulfillment does promise a
complete, literal, future fulfillment of the whole. (Things
to Come: A Study in Biblical Eschatology. See Page 63-64)
Now in that day -
To what
day is Isaiah referring?
The possible interpretations (which are not necessarily mutually
exclusive) are listed below...
(1) A historical day - The day that Assyria defeated the
Northern Kingdom and invaded and threatened to destroy the Southern
Kingdom. Even in the face of national tragedy, God would preserve a
remnant.
(2) A future day - The day when a remnant of believing Jews
will return to their Messiah, the Holy One of Israel, which
from other passages will occur in the last days just before the Second
Coming of Christ.
While the context is the prophecy regarding
the destruction of Assyria indicate that Isaiah was certainly
referring to a historical fulfillment in his day but there are characteristics in this
passage
which would seem to allow for one to interpret it as a double
reference."
(1) The phrase in that day is often used in contexts
which have a near and future fulfillment (see notes below). There is
another use of in that day which clearly refers to a yet future
day when the Messiah returns.
(2) The present passage appears to distinguish "Israel" and
"the house of Jacob". It appears that Isaiah is not addressing only
the Northern Kingdom of Israel but also the Southern Kingdom using the
phrase "remnant of Israel and those of the house of Jacob". The
house of Jacob in Isaiah 2:5, 6, 8:17 definitely refers to the
Southern Kingdom. The phrase House of Jacob is used 9 times in
Isaiah - Isa 2:5 Isa 2:6 Isa 8:17 Isa 10:20 Isa 14:1 Isa 29:22 Isa
46:3 Isa 48:1 Isa 58:1
(3) The time phrase never again refers to
Israel/Jacob relying on the strength of men (in context the Assyrian
Empire but a picture of the strength of men who filled with pride and
self reliance) rather than the strength of Jehovah. The future
believing Jewish remnant will forever rely on Jehovah (Messiah). This
latter prophecy has never been fulfilled for Israel/Jacob as a nation.
It will be fulfilled in the last days just before Messiah returns,
when a believing remnant of the nation of Israel will have their eyes
opened to see their Messiah and to come to totally rely upon Him.
To reiterate, this prophecy
clearly had a partial fulfillment in Isaiah's day when a remnant of
Jews came to truly (rely on) Jehovah as their Righteous One.
However as discussed this passage also seems to foreshadow a greater
day for the divided, nation, in that day when the Messiah
returns and as Paul says "all Israel will be saved" (Ro 11:26-note)
Comment: I encourage you to
be a Berean as these notes make no claim to being authoritative or
100% accurate. So while this section seems to allow for an
interpretation as a "double reference", you may not agree after
carefully "examining the Scriptures daily, to see whether these things
were so" (Acts 17:11-note).
If you would like to do further study
on the topic of The Future of Israel, let me
suggest a 12 hour (free) course by
Dr Anthony Garland
What Will Happen to Israel?
which presents a detailed expository discussion of Romans 9-11.
Jameison, an older
commentary writes that...
The effect on the “remnant”
(contrasted with the Assyrian remnant, Is 10:19); namely, those who
shall be left after the invasion of Sennacherib, will be a return from
dependence on external idolatrous nations, as Assyria and Egypt (2Ki
18:21; 16:7, 8, 9), to the God of the theocracy; fulfilled in part in
the pious Hezekiah’s days; but from the future aspect under which
Paul, in Ro 9:27, 28...regards the whole prophecy, the “remnant,” “who
rely upon the Lord,” probably will receive their fullest realization
in the portion of Jews left after that Antichrist shall have been
overthrown, who shall “return” unto the Lord (Isa 6:13; 7:3; Zec 12:9,
10; Zep 3:12).
Teed writes...
“In that day” often refers to the
last days when the Lord will punish the wicked and set up His
righteous kingdom (Isaiah. 4:2). However, here it seems to refer to
the more immediate judgment on the Northern Kingdom by Assyria (10:27)
and the return of a remnant from that empire. Though Israel had many
people “like the sand of the sea,” only a few would return.
Destruction, though overwhelming, would be fair (righteous) and would
be on the whole land, both Israel and Judah.
But things will also be the same in
the “Last Days” just before Jesus returns. (Isaiah
10 Teed Commentaries) (It is interesting that Teed goes on
to paraphrase Harry Ironside's comments [see below] that speak of a
future fulfillment - see Ironside's comment below.
Harry Ironside sees a
future prophetic fulfillment in Isaiah 10:20-23 (but as discussed
above, not everyone agrees with this genre of interpretation)...
When the judgments of God are being
poured out upon the earth in the dark days of the great tribulation, a
remnant of the Jews will turn to the Lord in deep repentance and in
living faith. These will prove the greatness of His mercy and the
unfailing character of His promises. No longer relying for their help
on the powers that persecuted and failed them in the hour of their
need, as when Ahaz turned first to Assyria and then to Egypt in his
desperate plight, they will find their resource and protection in God
Himself. (Isaiah 10:20)
The prophetic Word is clear and
free of all obscurity. Only unbelief can deny its definite application
to a literal remnant of the sons of Jacob when they turn to the Lord
in the time of their greatest trouble. Then He will awake and will
come to their help, and He will save the nation in the remnant. We
need to remember that they are not all Israel which are of Israel. The
great majority “as the sand of the sea” will go into utter apostasy
and be destroyed in their sins, but a remnant shall return and be
acknowledged by God as His people. And so, as we learn in Romans 11,
“All Israel shall be saved,” for this remnant ("all Israel") will be
the true Israel in that day of Jehovah’s power.
John Walvoord writes that
Isaiah 10:5-34 describes God’s judgment...
on Assyria whom God used to judge
Israel as well as on Israel herself (Isa 10:5-19). God’s judgment on
Assyria was described in detail. The prophecy made clear that after
God used the Assyrians to judge Israel, He would then judge the
Assyrians (Isa 10:12, 16, 18)... After Assyria had been destroyed, God
would restore “the remnant of Israel, the survivors of the house of
Jacob” (Isa 10:20). A remnant of Israel would return to their land
(Isa 10:21). In graphic language, Assyria was described as cut down
like a tree whose limbs are cut off (Isa 10:33, 34). A partial
return of Israel to their land from Assyria was accomplished after
Nineveh fell to the Babylonians (612BC). The complete regathering
of Israel will be fulfilled in relation to the second coming of
Christ. (The
Prophecy Knowledge Handbook All the Prophecies of Scripture Explained
in One Volume or
Logos)
(Bolding added)
In that day - 83v in
the OT and almost 50% occur in Isaiah (40x) - See related notes on
the phrase in that day in comments on
Isaiah 2:11,
Isaiah 4:2,
Isaiah 7:18.
Lev 7:35; Nu 32:10; Dt 31:17,
18; 1Sa 3:12; 8:18;
Isa 2:11, 17, 20; 3:18; 4:1,2; 5:30; 7:18, 20,21, 23; 10:20, 27;
11:10; 12:4; 17:4, 7, 9; 19:16, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24; 20:6; 22:8, 12,
20, 25; 23:15; 24:21; 25:9; 26:1; 27:1, 2, 12, 13; 28:5; 31:7; 52:6
Jer 4:9; 48:41; 49:22, 26; 50:30; Hos 2:16, 18, 21; Joel 3:18; Amos
2:16; 8:3, 9, 13; 9:11; Mic 4:6; 5:10; Zeph 3:11, 16; Zech 2:11; 3:10;
9:16; 12:3f, 6, 8f, 11; 13:1f, 4; 14:4, 6, 8f, 13, 20f; Mk 2:20;
Lk 6:23; 10:12; Jn 14:20; 16:23, 26
Oswalt comments on in
that day alluding to this phrase as having a double reference
(fulfillment)...
“In that day” is an
expansive term referring to any future time of God’s judgment and/or
restoration. Thus, it is not necessary to refer it directly to the
events of 701BC nor even to the events of 620–609BC, when Assyria was
finally destroyed. Rather, here it speaks of that future time when all
the punishment at the hands of the nations will be over and the
purified “remnant” of God’s people (see Is 4:2–6) will be brought
home. (Oswalt,
J. The NIV Application Commentary: Isaiah (176). Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan)
Cornerstone Bible Commentary
on in that day...
For connection with the Messianic
Age, see Isaiah 11:10, 11; 12:1, 4.
Motyer on in that day...
This phrase identifies a moment
when God’s hand is particularly seen in human history. Customarily,
this is a hand of judgment, but as here and in Isa 4:2, that judgment
is not to be considered in merely destructive terms, for there shall
be a purified remnant which will emerge from the chaos of that day
(Mal. 4:1–3).
(The
Prophecy of Isaiah: An Introduction & Commentary) (Logos)
(Although Motyer does not go so far
as to state that this prophecy has a future and complete fulfillment
as I have espoused, he make an interesting statement in which he seems
to leave that "door open" writing that ) Isaiah is looking forward to
a day when a restored Judah will have become wise enough to put her
trust in God, Who is her Holy One and Whose intentions for her are
pure, Whose power is unique, and whose commitment to her is total. (My
question would be - has that "day" come to pass in a way that would
completely fulfill Isaiah's prophecy?)
C I Scofield on in
that day...
That day is often the
equivalent of "the day of the LORD" (Isa 2:10-22; Rev 19:11-21). The
prophecy here passes from the general to the particular, from historic
and fulfilled judgments upon Assyria to the final destruction of all
Gentile world power at the return of the Lord in glory.
Remnant Summary (C I
Scofield): In the history of Israel a remnant may be discerned, a
spiritual Israel within the national Israel. In Elijah's time 7000 had
not bowed the knee to Baal (1Ki 19:18). In Isaiah's time, Israel had
been reduced to only a few godly "survivors" (Isa 1:9), for whose sake
God still forebore to destroy the nation. During the captivities the
remnant appears in Jews like Esther, Mordecai, Ezekiel, Daniel,
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. At the end of the seventy years of
Babylonian captivity it was the remnant that returned under Ezra and
Nehemiah. At the advent of our Lord, John the Baptist, Simeon, Anna,
and those "who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem"
(Lk 2:38) were the remnant. During the Church Age the remnant is
composed of believing Jews (Ro 11:4, 5). But an important aspect of
the remnant is prophetic. During the great tribulation a remnant out
of all Israel will turn to Jesus as Messiah, the "sealed" Israelites
of Rev 7:3-8.
Remnant - See on site study of
the important doctrine of the
remnant.
Although the specific word "remnant" is not used in the in
previous chapters of Isaiah, the concept of remnant has been clearly
alluded to and constitutes an important doctrine in Isaiah (even
appearing in the name of his son Shear-jashub = “a remnant will
return” - Isa 7:3-note)...
Unless the LORD of hosts Had left
us a few survivors, we would be like Sodom, We would be like
Gomorrah. (Isa 1:9-note)
In that day the Branch of
the LORD will be beautiful and glorious, and the fruit of the earth
will be the pride and the adornment of the survivors of Israel.
And it will come about that he who is left in Zion and remains
in Jerusalem will be called holy-- everyone who is recorded for life
in Jerusalem (Ed: Note the allusion to "election"). (Isa 4:2,3-note)
Yet there will be a tenth portion
in it, And it will again be subject to burning, Like a terebinth or an
oak Whose stump remains when it is felled. The holy seed is its
stump." (Isa 6:13)
In the present context the
remnant of Israel is synonymous with those of the house of
Jacob who have escaped.
refers to Jews who placed
their faith in Messiah. Throughout history there have always been some
Jews who have had their hearts circumcised and become Jews not just in
the physical sense but in a spiritual sense (see Paul's comments Ro
2:27, 28, 29-note).
John MacArthur adds
that...
A small nucleus of God’s people,
preserved by His sovereign grace, form this righteous remnant in the
midst of national apostasy. There were always the obedient few who
preserved, obeyed, and passed on God’s law. There will always be a
remnant because God will never forsake the Abrahamic Covenant (cf. Mic
2:12,13; Ro 9:27; 11:5).
(MacArthur,
J.: The MacArthur Study Bible Nashville: Word
or
Logos)
The one who struck them -
The king of the empire of Assyria.
Rely...rely (08172) (sha'an)
which means to lean upon or rest against (as for support - Samson in
Jdg 16:26, Saul on his sword 2Sa 1:6) and figuratively as in this
passage means to rely on in the sense of depending upon. The idea is
that one has trust and belief in something (someone). For example in a
proverb most of us have memorized (if you have not, you should
consider
memorizing
it!) we read...
Trust (Hebrew = batah; Lxx =
peitho) in Jehovah with all (Lxx = holos = a whole heart) your heart
and do not lean (sha'an) on your own understanding. (Pr
3:5)
Comment: Trust in God or
trust in self is the picture.
Sha'an - 20 verses in the
OT - Ge 18:4; Nu 21:15; Jdg 16:26; 2Sa 1:6; 2Kgs 5:18; 7:2, 17; 2Chr
13:18; 14:11; 16:7, 8; Job 8:15; 24:23; Pr 3:5; Isa 10:20; 30:12;
31:1; 50:10; Ezek 29:7; Mic 3:11
In Isa 30:11, 31:1, 50:10 trust
(batah) and rely (sha'an) are linked together. Notice also that
the NASB translates sha'an as "trust" (in Jehovah) in
2Chr 13:18, 14:11, 16:7, 8. Clearly what you chose to rely on
equates with that in which you place your trust.
Young sees a turning
point in the passage writing that...
Here grace breaks through! The
promises of God have not failed.
Ahaz had leaned for
help upon Assyria, and Assyria had set free from the danger that
threatened him. As a result, however, there came a train of worse
evils. Assyria marched in mighty power against Judah, but Assyria
would be brought to an end, and then the people of God would turn to
the only One upon whom they could safely lean for support, the Holy
One of Israel. (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
JEHOVAH - JESUS
THE HOLY ONE OF ISRAEL
The LORD,
the Holy One of Israel - "LORD" in all
capital letters signifies "Jehovah" in the NASB and Jehovah is clearly
identified as the Holy One of Israel (see notes on "Holy One"
in Isa 10:17). Who is "Jehovah"? Or to ask it another way, who is "I
Am" in the New Testament? Or is "Jehovah" mentioned in the NT? The
answer is yes, for John records
These things Isaiah said, because
he saw His glory, and he spoke of Him. (John 12:41)
Comment by Criswell: The
passage undoubtedly refers to the magnificent vision of Isaiah (cf.
Isa. 6), but also to the great Suffering Servant prophecy of Isa. 53
(Jn 12:38). Again the theme is sounded: the Messiah's glory is
revealed in His suffering. Since John declares that Isaiah saw the
glory of Jesus, it is certain that this vision was a Christophany,
i.e., a pre-incarnate appearance of the living Lord. See also study of
Jehovah = Jesus
MacArthur adds: (John 12:41)
is a reference to Isaiah 6:1. John unambiguously ties Jesus to God or
Yahweh of the OT (see note on 8:58)....(In John 8:58) Jesus declared
Himself to be Yahweh, i.e., the LORD of the OT.
Merrill Tenney comments:
John says that Isaiah saw Jesus and spoke of him. He identified Jesus
with the Jehovah (Yahweh) of the OT.
Application: Who are you relying
upon -- self or Savior? Have you surrendered your "right" and your
ability to take care of thing in your way, the way you thing is right?
Or are you willing to give up your way of confronting the "Assyrians"
in your life and rely on God's way?
Isaiah
10:21
A remnant will return, the remnant of Jacob, to the Mighty God.: (return:
Isa 7:3 9:13 19:22 55:7 65:8,9 Ho 6:1 7:10,16 14:1 Ac 26:20 2Co
3:14-16)
A
REMNANT
REPENTS
A remnant will return...to
the mighty God -
A picture of repentance. This phrase is reminiscent of the name of
Isaiah's son,
Shear-jashub (Isa
7:3). A small nucleus of God’s people, preserved by His sovereign
grace, form this righteous remnant (righteous by grace through faith,
even like Abraham - Ge 15:6) in the midst of national apostasy. There
were always the few who preserved, obeyed, and passed on God’s law.
There will always be a remnant because God will never forsake the
Abrahamic Covenant (cf. Mic 2:12,13 Ro 9:27 11:5).
Return (07725) (shub)
describes movement back to a point of departure, which can be literal
(sun dial in 2Ki 20:10) or figurative as in the present passage where
shub conveys the idea of a radical change in one's attitude
toward sin. This sense of shub implies a conscious moral separation
and personal decision to forsake sin and enter fellowship with God. We
see a striking example of this meaning in the king of Nineveh's charge
to his people to "turn (shub) from his wicked way and from the
violence which is in his hands." (Jonah 3:8). Repentance combines a
turn from evil and a turn to good. This remnant makes a volitional
choice to turn around and come back to the Mighty God.
The Dictionary of Biblical
Imagery notes that...
The remnant motif in the Bible is
associated with a variety of images, but the starting point of the
motif is with Israel, as an ethnic people, a nation and ultimately as
a symbol of the people of God. These can carry either a positive
connotation, such as the “righteous remnant,” or a negative
connotation, such as what remains following judgment. The negative
aspect of remnant is portrayed in exaggerated and colorful ways that
convey the gravity of divine judgment....Isaiah’s remnant idea (often)
carries with it the hope of restoration. The judgment will act as a
purge that will remove impure dross and leave behind a pure residue
(Is 1:25,26; see Purity). Those who have faith will survive the
coming flood (Is 28:16; 30:15). A holy seed will survive (Is
6:13). “He who is left in Zion and remains in Jerusalem will be
called holy, every one who has been recorded for life in Jerusalem”
(Is 4:3 RSV) (Dictionary
of Biblical Imagery- Leland Ryken, James C. Wilhoit, Tremper Longman
III or
Logos or
Wordsearch) (This
is a unique resource and is highly recommended!)
Mighty God (El Gibbor)
is the same name by which Isaiah had described the Messiah in (Isaiah
9:6-note).
God is the "Warrior God" Who is able to liberate His people from the
oppression of their enemies (in this case the Assyrians).
Young comments that...
Herein is graphically expressed the
truth which was taught in the name of Isaiah’s son, Shear-jashub.
Salvation had been promised, the seed of the woman would bruise the
serpent’s head. If this is to be accomplished there must be a remnant.
A remnant will indeed return, and this is the remnant of Jacob. It is
the true Israel, the elect people of God, who will lean not upon the
smiter Assyria but upon the Mighty God. This Mighty God has already
been introduced. He is One that will sit upon the throne of David. To
turn to ʾel gibbor is to turn to the Lord Himself. “Afterward,” said
the Lord through Hosea, “shall the children of Israel return, and seek
the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall fear the Lord and
His goodness in the latter days” (Hos. 3:5). (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
Comment: Most conservative
commentators interpret Hosea 3:5 as a prophecy of the nation of
Israel's repentance after going through the Refiner's fire of the
Great Tribulation (cp
Zech 12:10, 13:8, 9, Ro 11:25, 26-note).
Henry Morris comments on David
their king in Hos 3:5: Not only will they seek God as they had
known Him in ancient times, but they will also acknowledge "David" as
their king. That is, they will recognize Jesus as the long-awaited
"son of David," Who was also the Son of God, Whose "throne shall be
established for ever" (2Sa 7:12, 13, 14, 15, 16; Lk 1:31, 32, 33; Mt
22:41, 42, 43, 44, 45). In a secondary application, it may also be
that David himself, resurrected with all Old Testament saints (cp Da
12:13-note),
will again rule over earthly Israel during the millennium, when the
apostles also will be "judging the twelve tribes of Israel" (Mt 19:28;
27:52,53; 1Co 6:2; Rev 20:4; Jer 30:9; Ezek 34:23,24).
Oswalt...
While it is not clear that a
direct reference to Isa 9:6 is intended, the broad connection is
plain. There will come a day when God’s government will be established
and His might demonstrated in His Messiah.
(The
Book of Isaiah, Chapters 1–39)(Logos)
(Wordsearch)
Isaiah
10:22
For though your people, O Israel, may be like the sand of the sea, only a remnant within them will return. A destruction is determined,
overflowing with righteousness.: (though Your: 1Ki 4:20 Ho 1:10
Ro 9:27 11:5,6 Rev 20:8)(remnant: Isa 6:13)(destruction: Isa 6:11 8:8
27:10,11 28:15-22 Da 9:27 Ro 9:28) (with: Ge 18:25 Ac 17:31 Ro
2:5 3:5,6)
For though your people, O
Israel, may be like the sand of the sea, only a remnant within them
will return - For is a
term of explanation
- Isaiah is explaining more details about the remnant. Paul quotes this verse in Romans 9:27, 28...
Isaiah cries out concerning Israel,
“Though the number of the sons of Israel be like the sand of the sea,
it is the remnant that will be saved; for the Lord will execute His
word on the earth, thoroughly and quickly.” (Ro 9:27, 28-note).
MacArthur comments:
Isaiah prophesied that the southern kingdom of Judah would be
conquered and scattered—temporarily rejected by God—because of her
unbelief. Paul’s point is that the scattering Isaiah described was
only a preview of Israel’s rejection of the Messiah and her subsequent
destruction and scattering.
John Witmer comments that in
Romans 9:27-28: Paul quoted Old Testament verses to support the
fact that God in His sovereign choice and calling always includes a
Jewish segment, though it is a minority. The passages quoted (Isa.
10:22, 23 and Isa 1:9, both from the
Septuagint - Lxx)
make it clear that in God’s judgment on rebellious Israel He by
sovereign choice preserves and saves a remnant. Those promises were
fulfilled in the Captivity and Exile of both Israel and Judah and
in the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD and will also be fulfilled
in the national end-time deliverance of Israel (Ro 11:26, 27).
Vine comments that this
verse...
makes clear that here again (as
often in OT prophecy) the passage points not merely to the
immediate fulfillment, as in the case of the Assyrian invasion,
but looks on to later circumstances. For the apostle Paul in
Romans 9:27 applies Isa 10:22, 23 to the yet future time, when Israel,
passing through the
Great Tribulation, will
be reduced in number to a mere remnant (cp Zech 13:8, 9), the nucleus
of the redeemed nation at the inception of the Millennium. This will
be the issue of “the consumption decreed,” i.e., the judgments
of “the time of Jacob’s trouble,” (Jer 30:7) executed “with
righteousness” in the midst of the land. Accordingly the prophecy
relates to the future time of “the
Day of the Lord.”
Oswalt...
The promises to Abraham will not be
abrogated; indeed, they will be fulfilled (Ge 22:17; 32:12). But they
cannot be used as a hedge to protect oneself from judgment (Luke 3:7,
8, 9), which is apparently what some were doing in Isaiah’s day.
(The
Book of Isaiah, Chapters 1–39)(Logos)
(Wordsearch)
On the phrase overflowing
with righteousness, Guzik comments that...
When God allows destruction -
whether in outright judgment or loving correction - it is always
righteous, and never unfair. In fact, His judgment overflows with
righteousness! (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
Arnold Fruchtenbaum
The Remnant of Israel - According
to Romans 11:25, 26, 27, all Israel will be saved.
According to Isaiah
10:20–23, only the Remnant will be saved.
This is not a contradiction if
understood in the context of Israel’s national salvation. Zechariah
13:8, 9 points out that two-thirds of the Jewish population will be
destroyed during the Tribulation.
Only the Remnant will survive,
the escaped of Isaiah 4:2; 10:20; 37:31, 32; Joel 2:32; and Obadiah
1:17.
The remaining one-third become
believers, so at that point all Israel and the remnant of Israel
become one and the same, as Micah 2:12, 13 shows. I will surely
assemble, O Jacob, all of thee; I will surely gather the remnant of
Israel. The all of thee and the remnant of Israel become identical,
for with Israel’s national salvation the whole nation joins the
Remnant (Mic 2:12). Then, Messiah returns to rescue them (Mic 2:13).(Future
Israel - go to page 20)
Isaiah
10:23
For a complete destruction, one that is decreed, the Lord GOD of hosts
will execute in the midst of the whole land.: (decreed: Isa
14:26,27 24:1-23 Da 4:35)
The English translation of the
Septuagint gives a slight variation...
He will finish the work, and cut it
short in righteousness: because the Lord will make a short work in all
the world.
Complete destruction
(03617) (kalah) means completion as when God said Pharaoh would
"surely drive (them) out...completely (kalah)." (Ex 11:1). In
the present context the idea is annihilation (cp Nahum 1:8 = "complete
end", Da 11:16 = "destruction")
Kalah - 18v in the OT - Gen
18:21; Ex 11:1; 2Chr 12:12; Neh 9:31; Isa 10:23; 28:22; Jer 4:27;
5:10, 18; 30:11; 46:28; Ezek 11:13; 20:17; Dan 9:27; 11:16; Nah 1:8f;
Zeph 1:18. NAS = annihilation(1), complete destruction(5), complete
end(4), completely(4), destroy*(2), destruction(2), end(1),
entirely(1), full end(2).
There is one other use of
kalah in Isaiah...
And now do not carry on as
scoffers, Or your fetters will be made stronger; For I have heard from
the Lord GOD of hosts of decisive (charats - see "decreed" below; Lxx
= suntemno = to cut in pieces, to cut short, to cut off, to cut short,
figuratively to abruptly end an allotted time!) destruction
(kalah; Lxx = sunteleo = bringing something to its promised, ultimate
finish) on all the earth. (Isaiah 28:22)
Decreed (02782) (charats)
is a verb that has the primary sense of cut means to determine (as if
to cut out), to speak about something with an assurance or confidence.
For example God "cuts out" or determines the length of human life (Job
14:5 "his days are determined [charats]").
If God says (decrees) it that settles it
whether we choose to believe or not to believe!
Charats - 12v in the OT -
Ex 11:7; Lev 22:22; Josh 10:21; 2Sa 5:24; 1Ki 20:40; Job 14:5; Isa
10:22, 23; 28:22; Da 9:26, 27; 11:36. NAS = act promptly(1),
bark*(1), decided(1), decisive(1), decreed(3), determined(3),
maimed(1), uttered(1).
Charats is used in one of
the greatest prophecies in the entire Bible (Da 9:24-27)...
Then after the sixty-two weeks the
Messiah will be cut off (crucifixion) and have nothing, and the people
(Roman empire) of the prince who is to come (Antichrist) will destroy
the city and the sanctuary (Occurred in 70AD). And its end will come
with a flood; even to the end there will be war; desolations are
determined (charats). 27 And he (Antichrist) will make a firm covenant with the
many for one week (7 Years), but in the middle of the week (see Mt
24:15, 2Th 2:3,4 - marks beginning of the
Great Tribulation - Mt
24:21) he will put a stop to sacrifice and grain offering; and on the
wing of abominations will come one who makes desolate, even until a
complete destruction, one that is decreed (charats), is poured out on the one
who makes desolate. (Daniel 9:26-note,
Da 9:27-note,
context = Da 9:24-note,
Da 9:25-note)
Comment: If you have never
studied this great prophecy, you owe to yourself (especially in light
of the "signs of the times"!) to read it prayerfully, carefully and
literally, as it is without doubt (in my mind) the greatest specific
prophecy in all Scripture, because it predicts essentially to the day,
the first coming of the Messiah, His subsequent crucifixion and
rejection and the coming of the counterfeit "Christ", the Antichrist (Anti
has two senses = [1] Instead of, in place of and [2] Against, opposed
to.)
(Charats is also used in
Daniel's description of the future Antichrist) Then the king
will do as he pleases, and he will exalt and magnify himself above
every god and will speak monstrous things against the God of gods; and
he will prosper until the indignation is finished, for that
which is decreed will be done. (Da 11:36-note)
Comment: The Hebrew word for
indignation (zaam) is also used in Isaiah 10:5 and Isaiah 10:25.
Lord GOD of hosts - "the
Lord, the Lord of Heaven's Armies" (NLT)
In Isaiah 14 we read a
declaration similar to that in Isaiah 10:23...
This is the plan devised against
the whole earth; and this is the hand that is stretched out against
all the nations. For the LORD of hosts has planned, and who can
frustrate it? And as for His stretched-out hand, who can turn it back?
(Isa 14:26, 27)
Comment: In this passage in
Isaiah 14 the ultimate fulfillment applies not just to Israel, but to
"all the nations (goyim = Gentiles)," when Christ returns. (Second
Coming) History is indeed "His Story" and He is
actively at work in His world (Ps 50:12) carrying out His purposes. No
opposition can defeat God's plans (Nu 11:23 Job42:2 Je32:17 Ge18:14 Mk
10:27 Lk 1:37). No people or nation is automatically excluded from His
plan. God is
Sovereign
over human history
(Isa 10:26). All nations will have to submit to his judgment. This
principle will be seen in relation to other nations--both small and
great--in the oracles that follow. God is not like a man who makes
plans and finds he has no power to put them into effect. Perfect
wisdom and absolute power find their unity in God.
In the midst
of the whole land
- "In the midst of all the
earth" (Amplified). The Septuagint translates "whole land" with
the Greek phrase "te oikoumene hole" which literally means
the entire inhabited earth. This begs the
question of "Has there been a "complete destruction" of the entire
inhabited world in the history of mankind (the flood is a past event
in reference to this prophecy so is not relevant)?" Since the answer
to this is "no", it suggests that the ultimate fulfillment of this
passage refers to a future time of world wide destruction, which would
be very compatible with the
Great Tribulation
(cp Mt 24:21, 22) which is terminated by the
Second Coming
of Jesus.
Young seems to agree with
the preceding interpretation writing that the determined end will
be executed...
in the midst of the earth and
so will affect the whole earth. It is the last judgment, from
which no man can flee. It is not some local judgment, confined to the
boundaries of Palestine, but one in which all the earth is involved.
(Bolding added) (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
Motyer comments that...
the whole
land/in the midst of
all the earth/land indicates that the acts of God take place in
the actuality of history and in the life of this world.
(Bolding added)
Isaiah
10:24
Therefore thus says the Lord GOD of hosts, "O My people who dwell in
Zion, do not fear the Assyrian who strikes you with the rod and lifts
up his staff against you, the way Egypt did.: (my
people: Isa 4:3 12:6 30:19 46:13 61:3 Heb 12:22, 23, 24)(Do not fear: Isa
8:12,13 33:14, 15, 16 35:4 37:6,22,33, 34, 35)(The way Egypt did: Ex 1:10-16
14:9,21-31 15:6-10)
THE
GOD OF ARMIES SAYS...
DO
NOT
FEAR
My people - Using the
possessive pronoun "My", God is
reminding them of His faithfulness to His covenant promises to their
fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. (cp Ge 22:17). And given the
preceding context, the ones who should especially have no reason to
fear are those who are part of the blessed believing Jewish remnant
(cp Lk 12:4)
Who dwell in Zion - In
Jerusalem. This address is directed to the Southern Kingdom, Judah.
Do not fear - In the
midst of wrath God remembers mercy and offers comfort.
Beloved, have you not
experienced these comforting words from your Father in a time when you
were fearful? Beloved,
this is one of the great words of comfort from our heavenly Father, so
it should not surprise us that it permeates the pages of Scripture
from Genesis to Revelation (See below for 58 mentions of do not
fear in 57v in the NAS)...
Ge 15:1; 21:17; 26:24; 35:17; Ex
14:13; Nu 14:9; 21:34; Dt 1:21; 3:2, 22; 31:8; Josh 8:1; 10:8, 25; Jdg
6:23; Ru 3:11; 1Sa 12:20; 2Sa 9:7; 13:28; 1Kgs 17:13; 2Kgs 6:16;
17:34; 1Chr 22:13; 28:20; 2Chr 20:15, 17; 32:7; Ps 55:19; 64:4; Is
10:24 40:9 41:10, 13 14; 43:1, 5; 44:2; 51:7; 57:11; Jer 10:5; 46:27
28; La 3:57; Joel 2:21 22; Hag 2:5; Zech 8:13, 15; Mal 3:5; Mt 10:26,
28, 31; Lk 5:10; 12:7; 18:4; 1Pe 3:14; Re 2:10
Related phrase "do not be
afraid" (47x in 46v in the NAS - ) - Ge 43:23; 46:3; 50:19, 21; Ex
20:20; Dt 20:1, 3; 31:6; Josh 11:6; Jdg 4:18; 1Sa 4:20; 22:23; 23:17;
28:13; 2Ki 1:15; 19:6; 25:24; Neh 4:14; Ps 49:16; Pr 3:25; Isa 37:6;
44:8; Jer 1:8; 40:9; 42:11; Ezek 3:9; Da 10:12, 19; Zeph 3:16; Mt
1:20; 14:27; 17:7; 28:5, 10; Mk 5:36; 6:50; Lk 1:13, 30; 2:10; 8:50;
12:4, 32; Jn 6:20; Acts 18:9; 27:24; Rev 1:17
These words of comfort were
frequently on the lips of Jesus instructing us...
Do not be afraid,
(present
imperative
+ negative = Command to stop something that is in progress - stop
being afraid!) little flock, for your Father has chosen gladly to give
you the kingdom.
Motyer...
He (God) knows that the end will be
destruction and deportation (Isa 6:11f. Ed: Referring to the
coming Babylonian captivity some 100 years after this prophecy), but
he also knows that the Assyrians will not be the agents in this.
(The
Prophecy of Isaiah: An Introduction & Commentary) (Logos)
Guzik...
The Lord is telling His people,
“Judgment and correction are coming, and it will hurt. But I have a
plan, so don’t be afraid.” This is a hard word to believe, because
judgment and correction, by their very nature, hurt! Yet we can decide
to not be afraid and trust in the Lord, even when it hurts....Why
shouldn’t they fear? Because the Assyrians are not in charge, the Lord
is.
We can always be comforted by
the fact that God will never leave His people to the mercy of their
enemies. Even when He uses the Assyrians to bring judgment and
correction, He is still in charge.
(Isaiah 10 Commentary)
DOES
THE ASSYRIAN HAVE
A DOUBLE REFERENCE?
The Assyrian - Harry
Ironside sees a double fulfillment in Isaiah 10 and specifically
interprets the Assyrian as historically fulfilled in the empire
of Assyria which came against Jerusalem after defeating the Northern
Kingdom in 722BC. But Ironside also sees the Assyrian as a
shadow of the future Antichrist who will come against Jerusalem in the
last days (cp Zech 12:2, 3, 4, 14:2, 3). Thus Ironside comments
that...
In clear and definite terms, the
prophet predicts the overthrow of the enemy who was hammering, as it
were, at the gate of Jerusalem. God would prevent the carrying out of
his purpose even though it might seem for a time that Judah’s case was
hopeless. Literally, all was fulfilled in due time so far as the
prophecy had to do with the Assyrian of the past. When in the
last days another mighty power comes against Palestine from the same
region as that occupied by the Assyrians of old, his doom will be just
as certain as was that of the enemy in the past. The progress of the
Assyrian army marching down through the land is depicted graphically
in the verses that close this chapter (Isaiah 10:28-34)...Prophecy is
history written beforehand, and here Isaiah foretold the path that the
Assyrian would take as he marched through Palestine, wreaking his
vengeance upon city after city; but the closing verses tell of his
defeat at last when the Lord of hosts intervened in His mighty power
for the deliverance of those who cried to Him in the hour of their
distress. No military strategy, no weapons of war would avail to save
the haughty invader when the hand of God was stretched out against
him...(In his introduction to Isaiah 11 Ironside writes) There is a
very close connection with that which now comes before us and that
which we have seen in the last chapter. After the Assyrian is
destroyed and Israel will have been delivered from all her enemies, we
have the peaceful reign of Him who is the Rod out of Jesse’s stem, the
Branch of the Lord who is to bring all things into subjection to God
and rule with the iron rod of inflexible righteousness.
Comment: Ironside presents
an interesting futuristic interpretation which does have some parallel
with the events John describes in the Revelation. In Revelation 19 we
see the Antichrist (the Beast) defeated (Rev 19:11-note,
Rev 19:20-note,
cp Zech 14:2, 3) which is immediately followed by the description of a
period of 1000 years when Satan is bound (Rev 20:2) and Messiah rules
(Rev 20:4-note,
cp Zech 14:4, 5, 6, 7, 8 especially Zech 14:9, 11). And thus just as
the events of Isaiah 10 parallel the events of Revelation 19, so too
the events of Isaiah 11 parallel Revelation 20. I present these
thoughts for your consideration as a good Berean.
The way Egypt did - This
fact is meant to cause the hearers to have hope because despite
Egyptian oppression, the
Sovereign
Lord delivered Israel
by His strong hand. What He had done in the past, He was able to do
again with the Assyrians.
Beloved, it behooves all of us as God's children to keep fresh in
our
minds the times in our life when we have experienced divine
deliverances, so that we might remain hopeful in future trials and
afflictions. How is your memory of God's great and mighty deeds in
your life? Do you have any "memorial stones" to help you remember the
times when you were hidden in the cleft of the Rock? Sadly, we so
often forget these past deliverances and get "swallowed up" by the
pain of the present trial.
Isaiah
10:25
For in a very little while My indignation against you will be spent
and My anger will be directed to their destruction.: (For:
Isa 10:33,34 12:1,2 14:24,25 17:12-14 30:30-33 31:4-9 37:36-38 54:7
2Ki 19:35 Ps 37:10 Da 11:36 Heb 10:37)
For -
term of explanation
- God is explaining to Judah why they need not fear the Assyrian
invasion which will eventually advance to the very edge of Jerusalem
but no further.
My indignation - (this
same phrase with the same meaning is found in Isa 26:20-see below) The immediate
fulfillment of this prophecy refers to the Assyrian invasion who was
the conduit of Jehovah's indignation against His people.
Comment: Clearly this
prophecy was fulfilled in history with the Assyrian invasion of Judah,
but could this "indignation" also be a foreshadowing of the end times
indignation that the nation of Israel will experience at the hands of
the Antichrist (see notes below)? Possibly.
Indignation (02195) (za'am
from the parent verb za'am - 02194) is a noun which means
conveys the basic idea of experiencing or expressing intense anger,
fury, anger, rage or indignation.
TWOT...
The verb (za'am = 02194) is used to
indicate both the state of being indignant and the activity giving
expression to that state. It is used in reference to man, but more
often to God. Isaiah foretells a day when God’s “indignation” will be
experienced by Israel’s enemies (Isa 66:14). (The noun zaam)
is regularly translated “indignation,” referring more often to God
than to man.
Zaam - 22v in the OT - Ps
38:3; 69:24; 78:49; 102:10; Isa 10:5, 25; 13:5; 26:20; 30:27; Jer
10:10; 15:17; 50:25; Lam 2:6; Ezek 21:31; 22:24, 31; Da 8:19; 11:36;
Hos 7:16; Nah 1:6; Hab 3:12; Zeph 3:8. NAS = indignation(21),
insolence(1).
Isaiah uses zaam in chapter 26
in a warning of coming indignation...
Come, my people, enter into your
rooms and close your doors behind you; Hide for a little while until
indignation runs its course. (Isaiah 26:20)
Comment: Most conservative
commentators see this reference to indignation as a description of the
coming
Great Tribulation, that
short (3.5 year) but intense period (Jer 30:7) when the Antichrist has
full authority to exert his will, a major component of which includes
the "final holocaust" for the Jews (cp Zech 13:8, 9)
MacArthur notes that:
Israel’s final restoration was not immediately at hand. Hence she had
to continue praying in solitude for that restoration until the time of
God’s indignation would pass.
John Martin commenting on Isa
26:20, 21 adds that: Isaiah wrote that the future remnant
should hide during the time of distress (God’s wrath in the
Tribulation), knowing that deliverance from the Lord will come.
Eventually the Lord will set matters right by punishing people...for
their sins. All sins will be made known (the earth will disclose
the blood shed upon her), whether they have been done in secret or in
public. These words would have encouraged the remnant in Isaiah’s day
to remain true to the Lord, knowing that He will eventually judge sin.
After that judgment is accomplished, believers will be able to sing
the song recorded in Isaiah 26.
Young sees not only a past
fulfillment (in Assyrian and Babylonian "indignation" against the
Jews) but also a future aspect stating that
the period of indignation
continued until the restoration was complete and Christ had come.
Indignation was then the prelude of blessing to God’s people and of
wrath for His enemies. (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
My anger will be directed to
their destruction - When God had finished punishing His people, He
would direct His dreadful, powerful hand against Assyria.
Isaiah
10:26
The LORD of hosts will arouse a scourge against him like the slaughter
of Midian at the rock of Oreb; and His staff will be over the sea and
He will lift it up the way He did in Egypt.: (Arouse:
Isa 10:16-19 2Ki 19:35 Ps 35:23)(Like: Isa 9:4 Jud 7:25 Ps 83:11)(Staff:
Isa 10:24 11:16 51:9,10 Ex 14:25-27 Ne 9:10,11 Ps 106:10,11 Hab 3:7-15
Rev 11:18 19:15)
THE
IMPORTANCE OF REMEMBERING
PAST DIVINE DELIVERANCES
Jehovah explains how He will
scourge Assyria by comparing her punishment to that of two prior
episodes of divine deliverance which would serve to encourage Judah
and Jerusalem that would survive the coming onslaught of the
Assyrians.
LORD of hosts (see
study) - Yahweh of
Armies is able to defeat any human army!
Arouse (05782)('ur)
stir up, awake, incite. Once again we see clearly that the sovereign
hand of the Almighty is in control of in human history!
What event, circumstance, trial,
test, temptation or person is there in your life with which you are
not willing to trust Him?
A scourge - This is a
reference to the Babylonian and Median attack on the remnant of the
Assyrian Empire in about 609BC. The invaders divided the scraps of
Assyria among themselves. (For a discussion of the "Last
period and Fall of the Empire" scroll to the bottom of link =
Assyria)
Scourge (07752)(shot)
is a whip or lash (eg, to control animals - Pr 26:3, Na 3:2). The idea
is that of a device (such as a whip with leather thongs) used to
punish and bring pain (eg, 1Ki 12:11, 14).
Shot - 11v in the OT -
1Ki 12:11, 14; 2Chr 10:11, 14; Job 5:21; 9:23; Pr 26:3; Isa 10:26;
28:15, 18; Nah 3:2. NAS = scourge(5), whip(2), whips(4).
The records of what God has done
in the past to protect us and deliver us should serve to strengthen us
for the attacks of adversity, affliction, and trials that are yet to
come. God remains faithful and our faith in His faithfulness is
founded on His past episodes of faithfulness!
The slaughter of
Midian -
Jdg 7:25-note
describes the victory of
Gideon's small band
of men over the hordes of Midianites at the rock of
Oreb. This term of comparison
(like the slaughter) is saying that just as miraculous and complete
was Gideon’s victory over the Midianites, Jehovah's judgment of
Assyria would be similar just as complete and miraculous. 2Kings
19:35 describes how God simply sent the
Angel of the LORD, and killed
185,000 Assyrians in one night. When the people woke up, there were
185,000 dead Assyrian soldiers.
His staff...over the sea
- This is clearly a reference to Israel's miraculous deliverance from
Egyptian bondage via God's opening (for Israel to pass through) and
closing (for destruction of Pharaoh's army) of the Red Sea (see use of
staff in Ex 14:16, 26, 15:4). In the same way as He miraculously eradicated the
Egyptians, He would do something similarly miraculous against Assyria.
(See
In A Single Day
for passages describing God's miraculous intervention.)
Application: When fear
assaults you, do you fall back by faith on those times the Lord showed
Himself mighty in your life? Do you keep a record of those times to
"memorialize" His faithfulness? Do you pass these truths on to your
children? (See also
Fear, How to Handle It)
Oswalt records this
illustration...
In the 1970s Joseph Tson, a
Romanian pastor, heard a Voice of America broadcast enumerating all of
the failed promises of Marxism, and he immediately thought of all the
promises of the Christian faith that have come true. He has said that
in that moment he knew Communism could not survive and that he and
other Christians should begin preparing for the day of its collapse.
We might marvel at such vision, but the fact is, Tson was a man with a
memory, and because of that memory, he could see the future when
others could not. (Ibid)
Isaiah
10:27
So it will be in that day, that his burden will be removed from your
shoulders and his yoke from your neck, and the yoke will be broken
because of fatness.: (burden:
Isa 9:4 14:25 2Ki 18:13,14 Na 1:9-13)(because: Isa 37:35 2Sa 1:21 Ps
2:1-3,6: Ps 20:6 45:7 84:9 89:20-52 105:15 132:10,17,18 Da 9:24-26 Lk
4:18 Jn 1:41: Ac 4:27 1Jn 2:20,27)
In that day - What day?
The day God removes the yoke of oppression of Assyria from Judah.
Burden...yoke - These are
terms that speak of bondage or servitude that the Assyrian kings used
to boast about putting on the necks of conquered peoples. Oswalt
records an example of of boasting in the annals of Sargon II
“[I] imposed upon them the yoke of Ashur, my lord.”
Isaiah
10:28
He has come against Aiath, He has passed through
Migron; At
Micmash
he deposited his baggage.: (Aiath:
Jos 7:2 Ne 11:31)(Migron: 1Sa 14:2)(Michmash: 1Sa 13:2,5
14:5,31)
In Isa 10:28-32 we have a
graphic description of the Assyrian advance toward Jerusalem from the
city farthest north
Aiath or Ai
southward to Nob which is on the outskirts of Jerusalem. This
is as far as the army of the Assyrians came against Judah. They were
stopped here when the Lord killed 185,000 Assyrian soldiers in one
night.
Ryrie says that all of
the cities mentioned in verse 28-32 are within a three hour march of
Jerusalem.
Aiath or Ai (map)...Migron...Micmash
(map)...Geba
(map)...Ramah
(map)...Gibeah
(map)...
Gallim (exact
location not known but just north of Jerusalem)...Laish
(exact location not known but supposedly about a mile NE of
Jerusalem)...Anathoth...Madmenah...Gebim...Nob
(5-6 kilometers NE of Jerusalem)
Guzik explains why God
gives such detail regarding the cities of Judah pointing out that...
Because of the word of comfort and
encouragement in the previous section, Judah might think that God
wouldn’t send judgment among them at all. This section, with the
specific mention of many cities of Judah, is meant to show that God
will indeed allow the invasion of the Assyrians, even though He will
restore after the attack. (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
Isaiah
10:29
They have gone through the pass, saying, "Geba will be our lodging
place." Ramah is terrified, and Gibeah of Saul has fled away.: (The
pass: 1Sa 13:23 14:4)
As noted all these villages are
very near Jerusalem and thus Isaiah was graphically depicting the
slow, steady movement of the savage Assyrian forces toward the capital
city.
Geba (map)
- Assyrians would make this their lodging place.
Ramah
(map)
Gibeah (map)
Isaiah
10:30
Cry aloud with your voice, O daughter of Gallim! Pay attention,
Laishah and wretched Anathoth!:
(Gallim: 1Sa 25:44) (Laish: Jud 18:7,29) (Anathoth:
Jos 21:18 1Ki 2:26 Jer 1:1 32:8)
Gallim
(exact location not known but just north of Jerusalem)
Laish
(exact location not known but supposedly about a mile NE of
Jerusalem)
Anathoth
Isaiah
10:31 Madmenah has fled. The inhabitants of Gebim have sought refuge.:
(Madmenah: Jos 15:31)
Fled...sought refuge - A
picture of the unstoppable marauding forces of the Assyrians.
Wolf comments that...
With a deft poetic touch, Isaiah
told how the enemy moved through twelve different locations, coming
ever closer to the capital.
Madmenah
Gebim
Isaiah
10:32
Yet today he will halt at Nob; He shakes his fist at the mountain of
the daughter of Zion, the hill of Jerusalem.: (Nob:
1Sa 21:1 22:19 Ne 11:32)(shakes: Isa 10:24 11:15 13:2 19:16 Zec 2:9)(Mountain:
Isa 2:2 37:22)
Nob (5-6 kilometers NE
of Jerusalem)
He will halt at Nob - The
Assyrian invasion of Judah would advance no further than Nob. In the
preceding passages, Isaiah paints a picture of an unstoppable,
fearsome flood of forces from Assyria. And then he says they will
halt. God let them go so and no further. God was true to His Word
as history proved.
He shakes his fist -
Reflecting the pompous attitude of the Assyrians and similar to the
earlier description of "the Assyrian who strikes you with the rod and
lifts up his staff against you."
The daughter of Zion (Isa
1:8 10:32 16:1 37:22 52:2 62:11) - Jerusalem capital city of Judah.
The Dictionary of Biblical
Imagery notes that...
Often the word daughter is
found in expressions such as “daughter of Zion” (e.g., Is
1:8; Jer 4:31; Mic 4:10; Mt 21:5), “daughter of Sidon”
(Is 23:12) and “daughter of Babylon” (Jer 50:42). This
Hebrew idiom reflects a double metaphor common in the culture of the
ancient Near East: a capital city was personified as a woman, and the
inhabitants of that city collectively as her “daughter.” A pagan
city was personified by a female goddess whose husband was the local
patron deity; Zion or Jerusalem remained distinct as she whose
husband was the one true God, Yahweh. During times of war when a city
was overrun and its population exiled, the city was considered to be a
barren woman, rejected by her husband-deity (Is 54:1). Thus
her daughters, the collective inhabitants, depended on her for
identity but also shaped her future by their actions. For instance,
Isaiah proclaims to “barren” Jerusalem, “Rejoice, O barren woman!”
(Is 54:1) and prophesies a return of the inhabitants to that city
and an unprecedented future glory for it. Because of Isaiah’s use of
these idioms, Jesus fulfills prophecy by addressing Jerusalem as “daughter
of Zion” (Mt 21:5), and the apostle Paul quotes Isaiah 54:1
and announces in Galatians 4:26 that Jerusalem above
is “free” and that she is the “mother” of Christians. (Dictionary
of Biblical Imagery- Leland Ryken, James C. Wilhoit, Tremper Longman
III or
Logos or
Wordsearch) (This
is a unique resource and is highly recommended!)
Isaiah
10:33
Behold, the Lord, the GOD of hosts, will lop off the boughs with a
terrible crash; Those also who are tall in stature will be cut down and those who are lofty will be abased.: (lop:
Isa 10:16-19 37:24-36,38 2Ki 19:21-37 2Ch 32:21)(tall: Am 2:9)(lofty:
Isa 2:11-17 Job 40:11,12 Da 4:37 Lk 14:11)
See another prophecy of the
breaking of Assyria - Isaiah 14:24,25, 26, 27.
See comments regarding a
In A Single Day
for passages describing God's miraculous intervention and His lopping
off the boughs of Assyria with a terrible crash.
Behold (02009) (hinneh)
is an interjection (= a word in speaking or writing, thrown in
between words connected in construction, to express some emotion or
passion) often seeks to grab the reader's attention and says something
like - Look! Pay attention! Don't miss this next point! Hinneh
draws attention to an important fact or action that follows and in a
sense demands our attention. Vine adds that it is
notable that when behold (hinneh) is used in Isaiah, it always
introduces something relating to future circumstances.
Given the relentless march of
the Assyrian army toward Jerusalem, the reader is ready to hear of
Jerusalem being overthrown, but instead we hear "Behold!" This
stops the reader in his tracks so to speak and gives a radically
different prediction for the fate of Jerusalem. The God of armies
would lop off the boughs of the Assyrian army. What a picture
of mighty Assyria's abrupt fall from power!
Uses of hinneh in Isaiah
-
Isa 3:1; 5:7, 26, 30; 6:7f;
7:14; 8:7, 18, 22; 10:33; 12:2; 13:9, 17; 17:1, 14; 19:1; 20:6; 21:9;
22:17; 24:1; 25:9; 26:21; 28:2, 16; 29:8, 14; 30:27; 34:5; 35:4; 36:6;
37:7, 11, 36; 38:5, 8, 17; 39:6; 40:9f; 41:15, 27; 42:9; 43:19; 47:14;
48:7, 10; 49:12, 22; 51:22; 52:6, 13; 54:11; 58:9; 59:9; 60:2; 62:11;
65:1, 6, 13f, 17f; 66:12, 15.
Tall in stature...lofty -
God repeatedly emphasizes the pride and arrogance of the Assyrians.
Cut down (01438) (gada')
means to fell (as a tree), to cut down or off. Figuratively describes
severing the "tall in stature" Assyrians as if one were cutting a tree
down. This is poetic justice for the "axe" (Assyria) who boasted in
Isaiah 10:15 would itself be "axed" for its arrogance!
Motyer has an interesting
note comparing this section to the first verse of the next chapter
Isaiah 11:1, which is clearly a prophecy of the Messiah...
The cutting down of the lofty trees
can only refer to the destruction of Assyria. This provides the
perfect foil for the Messianic shoot, but it is extremely dramatic
after five verses of Assyrian self-confidence, inexorable progress and
affrontery! In contrast to the bogus sovereignty of the king, the real
Sovereign (hā’ādôn) takes centre stage.
(The
Prophecy of Isaiah: An Introduction & Commentary) (Logos)
Abased (08213) (shaphel)
means literally in a physical sense to be low and by bringing the
Assyrians to a lower place, it was a picture of God's humbling of this
arrogant people.
Isaiah
10:34
He will cut down the thickets of the forest with an iron axe, and
Lebanon will fall by the Mighty One.: (cut
down: Isa 10:18 37:24 Jer 22:7 46:22,23 48:2 Na 1:12)(Lebanon: Zec
11:1,2)(mighty one: Isa 31:8 37:36 Ps 103:20 Da
4:13,14,23 2Th 1:7 2Pe 2:11 Rev 10:1 Rev 18:21)
Guzik comments that...
The forests of Lebanon were
known for their large, mighty cedar trees. God will judge the proud
among Judah - and all the nations for that matter - and leave a once
mighty forest of those of high stature as if they were just stumps.
The bigger they are, the harder they fall! (Isaiah 10 Commentary)
Lebanon will fall (Isa 2:13,
37:24) - Isaiah's point is that if even Lebanon which was
famous for its thick forests of cedar trees and would fall before God,
Assyria should not think it could escape the powerful hand of the Lord
of Armies (Hosts).
Young adds that...
As elsewhere the Assyrian is
compared to Lebanon. “Behold, the Assyrian was a cedar in
Lebanon with fair branches, and with a shadowing shroud, and of an
high stature; and his top was among the thick boughs” (Ezek. 31:3).
But great as Lebanon was, it would fall by means of a Mighty
One, and that Mighty One is the punishing God of Israel. The forest,
mighty like Lebanon, is gone. The trees are felled, the thickets cut
down. The Mighty One remains, Lord over all. He has protected His
people and demonstrated His faithfulness. (The
Book of Isaiah 3 Vol. Edward J. Young) (Logos)
(Wordsearch)
By the Mighty One - Once
again we see that the Lord is the active "Agent" of the Assyrian
"defoliation". This chapter repeatedly emphasizes the
Sovereignty
of God in the affairs of mankind.
Mighty (0117) ('addiyr)
means strong, powerful, majestic, awesome. The use in Psalm 93 gives a
good sense of the picture as it describes our great God...
More than the sounds of many
waters, Than the mighty breakers of the sea, The Lord on high is
mighty (Lxx = thaumastos = wonderful, worthy of our amazement).
(Ps 93:4)
Spurgeon: Jehovah, the self
existent and omnipotent, cares not for the opposition of dying men,
however many or mighty they may be.
"Loud the stormy billows spoke,
Loud the billows raised their cry;
Fierce the stormy billows broke,
Sounding to the echoing sky.
Strong the breakers tossing high,
Stronger is Jehovah's might.
True thy words; and sanctity
Well becomes thy temple bright."
Yea, than the mighty waves of the
sea. When the storm raises Atlantic billows, and drives them on with
terrific force, the Lord is still able to restrain them, and so also
when impious men are haughty and full of rage the Lord is able to
subdue them and overrule their malice. Kings or mobs, emperors or
savages, all are in the Lord's hands, and he can forbid their touching
a hair of the heads of his saints.
Addiyr - 25v in the NAS -
Ex 15:10; Jdg 5:13, 25; 1 Sam 4:8; 2Chr 23:20; Neh 3:5; 10:29; Ps 8:1,
9; 16:3; 76:4; 93:4; 136:18; Isa 10:34; 33:21; Jer 14:3; 25:34ff;
30:21; Ezek 17:23; 32:18; Nah 2:5; 3:18; Zech 11:2
Mighty One - This phrase is
used 14x in 13v in the OT - Ge 10:8 49:24 Josh 22:22 1Chr 1:10 Job
34:17 Ps 45:3 50:1 132:2 132:5 Isa 1:24 10:34 49:26 60:16
A SHADOW OF
THINGS TO COME?
These last passages describe
the miraculous destruction of the Assyrian army as it lay camped at
the very doors of Jerusalem and given the fact that the next section
describes the Millennial reign of Christ, it is reasonable to consider
that this abrupt destruction of the Assyrian army is a shadow or
picture of the abrupt destruction of the Army of the Antichrist ("the
Assyrian" in Micah 5,6 is interpreted by some commentators as the
Antichrist) at the sudden return of the LORD of the Armies, the Lord
Jesus Christ, the Victorious Warrior! John records this great scene
which will bring an end to this present age (and the times of the
Gentiles)...
Revelation 19:11 And I saw heaven
opened; and behold, a white horse, and He who sat upon it is called
Faithful and True; and in righteousness He judges and wages war.
12 And His eyes are a flame of fire, and upon His head are many
diadems; and He has a name written upon Him which no one knows except
Himself.
13 And He is clothed with a robe dipped in blood; and His name is
called The Word of God.
14 And the armies which are in heaven, clothed in fine linen, white
and clean, were following Him on white horses.
15 And from His mouth comes a sharp sword, so that with it He may
smite the nations; and He will rule them with a rod of iron; and He
treads the wine press of the fierce wrath of God, the Almighty.
16 And on His robe and on His thigh He has a name written, "KING OF
KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS."
17 And I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried out with a
loud voice, saying to all the birds which fly in midheaven, "Come,
assemble for the great supper of God;
18 in order that you may eat the flesh of kings and the flesh of
commanders and the flesh of mighty men and the flesh of horses and of
those who sit on them and the flesh of all men, both free men and
slaves, and small and great."
19 And I saw the beast and the kings of the earth and their armies,
assembled to make war against Him who sat upon the horse, and against
His army.
20 And the beast was seized, and with him the false prophet who
performed the signs in his presence, by which he deceived those who
had received the mark of the beast and those who worshiped his image;
these two were thrown alive into the lake of fire which burns with
brimstone.
21 And the rest were killed with the sword which came from the mouth
of Him who sat upon the horse, and all the birds were filled with
their flesh. |