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												Verse 1-2Isaiah 10:1-2. Wo, &c. — The 
												first four verses of this 
												chapter are closely connected 
												with the foregoing, and ought to 
												have been joined thereto, being 
												a continuation of the subject 
												treated of in it. We have here 
												the fourth evil charged on the 
												people, and the punishment of 
												it. The sin complained of is the 
												injustice of the magistrates and 
												judges, who decreed unrighteous 
												decrees — That is, made unjust 
												laws, and gave forth unjust 
												sentences, which is termed in 
												the next clause, writing 
												grievousness, or grievous 
												things, edicts which caused 
												grief and vexation to their 
												subjects. To turn aside the 
												needy from judgment — From 
												obtaining a just sentence, 
												because these rulers and judges 
												either denied or delayed to hear 
												their causes, or when they heard 
												them decided unjustly; to take 
												away the right from the poor — 
												Whom I have, in a special 
												manner, committed to your care; 
												of my people — Whom I had taken 
												into covenant with myself; and 
												therefore this is an injury, not 
												only to them, but also to me. 
												The punishment assigned to this 
												iniquity is, that they should be 
												absolutely deserted and deprived 
												of all help and protection from 
												God, whose laws they had so 
												shamefully perverted; and should 
												perish miserably before their 
												enemies, who should come from 
												far.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Isaiah 10:3-4. What will ye do — 
												To save yourselves? in the day 
												of visitation? — When I shall 
												come to visit you in wrath, as 
												the next words limit the 
												expression. The desolation which 
												shall come from far — From the 
												Assyrians. This he adds, because 
												the Israelites, having weakened 
												the Jews, and being in amity 
												with the Syrians, their next 
												neighbours, were secure. To whom 
												will ye flee for help — To the 
												Syrians, as now you do? But they 
												shall be destroyed together with 
												you, 2 Kings 16:9; and where 
												will you leave your glory — To 
												be kept safe for your use, and 
												to be restored to you when you 
												call for it? By their glory, he 
												means, either, 1st, their power 
												and authority, which now they so 
												wickedly abused; or, 2d, their 
												wealth, gotten by injustice, as 
												glory sometimes means: see 
												Genesis 31:1; Psalms 49:16-17. 
												Without me — Without my favour 
												and help, which you have 
												forfeited, and do not seek to 
												recover; they shall bow down — 
												Notwithstanding all their 
												succours; under the prisoners — 
												Or among the prisoners; and they 
												shall fall under the slain — Or 
												among the slain. The meaning is, 
												that it was in vain for the 
												Israelites to trust in their own 
												strength, or in the assistance 
												of the Syrians, or any other 
												allies, since it was from God 
												alone they could obtain 
												deliverance, without whose aid, 
												or when he deserted them, they 
												should all bow down under the 
												yoke of the Assyrians. In the 
												Septuagint, and vulgar Latin, 
												these words are joined to the 
												foregoing verse, to this sense: 
												“Whither will this people flee 
												for refuge to preserve 
												themselves, that they may not 
												bow down, or be subdued among 
												the captives, or destroyed among 
												the slain?”
 
 Verse 5
 Isaiah 10:5. O Assyrian, &c. — 
												We have here the fourth section 
												of the fifth sermon, which 
												reaches to the end of this 
												chapter, and which is two-fold; 
												containing, 1st, A proposition 
												in this verse; and, 2d, The 
												unfolding of it in the following 
												verses. It is a new and distinct 
												prophecy, and, as the former 
												part of it foretels the invasion 
												of Sennacherib and the 
												destruction of his army, it must 
												have been delivered before the 
												fourteenth year of Hezekiah’s 
												reign. “In the former chapters 
												the prophet had foretold the 
												fate of the Ephraimites and 
												Syrians, who had determined to 
												attack, and, if possible, 
												subvert the Jewish Church and 
												state. He therefore now turns 
												his discourse to the Assyrians, 
												the executors of this judgment, 
												who also in their time should 
												make the same attempt against 
												Judea, and denounces their 
												punishment, teaching, at the 
												same time, in what light they 
												were held by God, and 
												consequently were to be 
												considered by the careful 
												observers of the ways of God. 
												The proposition in this verse is 
												elegant, but very difficult to 
												be turned into another language, 
												according to its original force. 
												Its immediate meaning is, ‘Wo to 
												the Assyrian, who is the rod of 
												mine anger, and the staff, which 
												is in his hands, is my 
												severity;’ that is, ‘whatever 
												strength or power they have, 
												which they have used in 
												afflicting my people, would have 
												been none at all, if my people 
												had not provoked my wrath and 
												severity; so that, not the 
												Assyrians themselves, but my 
												wrath and severity, and the 
												decrees of my justice, ought to 
												be esteemed the rod and staff 
												beating my people; since, 
												without that severity, the 
												Assyrians themselves could have 
												done nothing.’ Vitringa remarks, 
												that all the characters of this 
												prophecy belong to Sennacherib; 
												though possibly it may have a 
												more extensive scope, and refer 
												to the destruction of all the 
												enemies of God, and the 
												following great empires, which 
												God made use of as rods and 
												scourges, to chastise and amend 
												his people, till the 
												manifestation of the kingdom of 
												his Son in the world: see 
												Jeremiah 51:20.” — Dodd. Be this 
												as it will, the prophet here 
												instructs us in a great and 
												important truth: “That God often 
												prospers wicked and tyrannical 
												governments to be his scourge 
												and the instruments of his 
												vengeance upon others; and when 
												they have done the work which 
												God allots them, he then 
												punishes them for those very 
												oppressions which they have 
												exercised toward their 
												neighbours, and to which they 
												were carried on purely by their 
												own ambition and covetousness, 
												although Providence made them 
												serviceable to better ends and 
												purposes.” — Lowth.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Isaiah 10:6-7. I will send him — 
												By my providence, giving him 
												both opportunity and inclination 
												to undertake this expedition; 
												against a hypocritical nation — 
												Or, a profane nation, as the 
												word חנŠrather signifies; and 
												against the people of my wrath — 
												The objects of my just wrath, 
												devoted to destruction. To tread 
												them down like the mire of the 
												streets — Easily to conquer 
												them, and utterly to destroy 
												them, as he did after this time. 
												Howbeit, he meaneth not so — He 
												does not design the execution of 
												my will, but only to extend his 
												conquests, and thereby to 
												enlarge his empire, and gratify 
												his ambition. Which is 
												seasonably added, to justify God 
												in his judgments threatened to 
												the Assyrian, notwithstanding 
												this service. But to destroy 
												nations not a few — To sacrifice 
												multitudes of people to his own 
												pride and covetousness, which 
												was abominable impiety.
 
 Verses 8-10
 Isaiah 10:8-10. For he saith, 
												Are not my princes, &c. — Are 
												they not equal for power, and 
												wealth, and glory, to the kings 
												of other nations, though they be 
												my subjects and servants? Is not 
												Calno as Carchemish? — Have I 
												not conquered one place as well 
												as another, the stronger as well 
												as the weaker? Have I not from 
												time to time added new conquests 
												to the old? None of those 
												cities, against which he had 
												turned his arms, had been able 
												to resist him; but he had 
												subjugated them all. Calno, 
												Carchemish, Hamath, and Arpad, 
												were cities of Syria and Israel, 
												which this mighty monarch had 
												subdued. Is not Samaria — Or, 
												Shall not Samaria be, as 
												Damascus? — Shall I not take 
												that as I have done this city? 
												For although Damascus, possibly, 
												was not yet taken by the 
												Assyrians, yet the prophet 
												speaks of it as actually taken, 
												because these words are 
												prophetically delivered, and 
												supposed to be uttered by the 
												king of Assyria, at or about the 
												time of the siege of Samaria, 
												when Damascus was taken. As my 
												hand hath found — Hath taken, as 
												this word is often used, the 
												kingdoms of the idols — Which 
												worshipped their own idols, and 
												vainly imagined that they could 
												protect them from my power. He 
												calls the gods of the nations, 
												not excepting Jerusalem, idols, 
												by way of contempt, because none 
												of them could deliver their 
												people out of his hands, and 
												because he judged them to be but 
												petty gods, far inferior to the 
												sun, which was the god of the 
												Assyrians. Whose graven images 
												did excel them of Jerusalem — 
												Namely, in reputation and power. 
												Which blasphemy of his proceeded 
												from his deep ignorance of the 
												true God.
 
 Verse 12
 Isaiah 10:12. Wherefore — 
												Because of this impudent 
												blasphemy; when the Lord hath 
												performed his whole work — Of 
												chastising his people as long as 
												he sees fit. I will punish the 
												fruit of the stout heart, &c. — 
												Here it is foretold, says Bishop 
												Newton, that when the Assyrians 
												“shall have served the purposes 
												of Divine Providence, they shall 
												be severely punished for their 
												pride and ambition, their 
												tyranny and cruelty to their 
												neighbours. Now there was no 
												prospect of such an event” when 
												Isaiah uttered this prediction, 
												namely, “while the Assyrians 
												were in the midst of their 
												successes and triumphs; but 
												still the word of the prophet 
												prevailed; and it was not long 
												after these calamities brought 
												upon the Jews, that the Assyrian 
												empire, properly so called, was 
												overthrown, and Nineveh 
												destroyed.”
 
 Verse 13-14
 Isaiah 10:13-14. For he saith, 
												&c. — “From hence to the 
												twentieth verse we have a more 
												full exposition and confirmation 
												of what had gone before, 
												particularly the pride of the 
												Assyrian and his vain boasting 
												in these verses; a refutation 
												thereof in Isaiah 10:15; and the 
												punishment ordained for him by 
												God, in Isaiah 10:16-19. By the 
												strength of my hand I have done 
												it, &c. — Here the prophet sets 
												forth his insolent boasting of 
												the greatness of his deeds, the 
												prosperity of his empire, and 
												the success of his warlike 
												expeditions, all which are 
												ascribed by him to the prudence 
												of his own counsels, and the 
												valour and strength of his 
												forces; but without any the 
												least acknowledgment of any 
												superior and overruling power.” 
												I have removed the bounds of the 
												people — I have invaded their 
												lands, and added them to my own 
												dominions, Proverbs 22:28. And 
												have robbed their treasures — 
												Hebrew, עתודתיהם, their prepared 
												things, their gold and silver, 
												and other precious things, which 
												they had been long preparing and 
												laying up in store. And I have 
												put down the inhabitants — 
												Deprived them of their former 
												glory and power. And my hand 
												hath found as a nest — As one 
												finds young birds in a nest; and 
												as one gathereth eggs — Which 
												the dam hath left in her nest; 
												have I gathered all the earth — 
												All the riches of the earth: an 
												hyperbole not unusual in the 
												mouths of such boasters. “The 
												comparison is elegant; and 
												nothing could more strongly or 
												significantly describe the 
												insolent boasting of the 
												Assyrian. It is remarkable, that 
												birds, after they have laid 
												their eggs in their nests, are 
												most diligent in their care of 
												them; and if, at any time, they 
												are obliged, for fear of the 
												spoiler, to forsake them, they 
												hover about their nests, and 
												flutter around, moving their 
												wings, and peeping, chirping, or 
												lamenting; thus imitating the 
												affections of the human mind. 
												The prophet elegantly implies by 
												this simile the extreme dread of 
												this proud and oppressing king 
												which reigned in the minds of 
												the conquered people, and we 
												find that the mighty tyrants and 
												conquerors of Asia did spread 
												such terror.” See Lowth’s 
												Twelfth Prelection, and Dodd.
 
 Verse 15
 Isaiah 10:15. Shall the axe 
												boast itself, &c. — How absurd 
												is it for thee, who art but an 
												instrument in God’s hand, to 
												blaspheme thy Lord and Master, 
												who has as great power over thee 
												as a man hath over the axe 
												wherewith he heweth? As if the 
												rod, &c. — See the margin; or, 
												as if the staff, &c. — Should 
												forget that it was wood, and 
												should pretend, or attempt, to 
												lift up itself — Either without, 
												or against the man that moveth 
												it. As if it were no wood — 
												Literally translated, it is, As 
												if the staff should lift up no 
												wood; that is, should lift up 
												man, who is very different from 
												wood: as if the staff should 
												lift the man instead of the man 
												lifting the staff. In this way 
												does the prophet refute the vain 
												boasts of the Assyrian, and 
												teach him, that, “in all his 
												counsels, motions, and works, he 
												was but the minister of the 
												Divine Providence; incapable of 
												doing any thing without the 
												divine will and permission; and 
												therefore his boasting was to be 
												considered in no other light 
												than as if the axe, or saw, or 
												rod, should magnify themselves 
												against him who handled them, 
												and should ascribe to themselves 
												that effect which was only 
												caused by the mover.”
 
 Verses 16-19
 Isaiah 10:16-19. Therefore shall 
												the Lord, the Lord of hosts — 
												The sovereign Lord and General 
												of his and of all other armies; 
												send among his fat ones leanness 
												— Strip him, and all his great 
												princes and commanders, of all 
												their wealth, and might, and 
												glory. And under his glory he 
												shall kindle, &c. — He will 
												destroy his numerous and 
												victorious army, and that 
												suddenly and irrecoverably, as 
												the fire doth those combustible 
												things which are cast into it; 
												which was fulfilled 2 Kings 
												19:25. And the light of Israel — 
												That God, who is, and will be, a 
												comfortable light to his people; 
												shall be a fire — To the 
												Assyrians; and it shall devour 
												his thorns and briers — His vast 
												army, which is no more able to 
												resist God than dry thorns and 
												briers are to oppose the fire 
												which is kindled among them. And 
												shall consume the glory of his 
												forest — “The briers and 
												thorns,” says Bishop Lowth, “are 
												the common people; and the glory 
												of his forest are the nobles, 
												and those of the highest rank 
												and importance. The fire of 
												God’s wrath shall destroy them, 
												great and small.” And of his 
												fruitful field — Of his 
												soldiers, who stand as thick as 
												ears of corn do in a fruitful 
												field. Hebrew, Of his Carmel; an 
												allusion possibly to the vain 
												threat, which God foreknew the 
												Assyrian would hereafter utter, 
												with regard to Israel, I will 
												enter into the height of his 
												border, and the forest of his 
												Carmel, Isaiah 37:24. Both soul 
												and body — Hebrew, מנפשׁ ועד 
												בשׂר, from the soul, even to the 
												flesh, a proverbial expression. 
												The fire of God’s wrath shall 
												consume them entirely and 
												altogether. And they shall be — 
												The state of the king, and of 
												his vast and valiant army, shall 
												be as when a standard- bearer 
												fainteth — Like that of an army, 
												when either the standard-bearer 
												is slain, or rather flees away, 
												which strikes a terror into the 
												whole army, and puts them to 
												flight. Bishop Lowth, in this 
												clause, follows the reading of 
												the LXX., ως ο φευγων απο φλογος 
												καιομενης, It shall be, as when 
												one fleeth out of raging flames: 
												that is, “The few that escape 
												shall be looked upon as having 
												escaped from the most imminent 
												danger.” The rest of the trees 
												of his forest — The remainders 
												of that mighty host; a child may 
												write them — A child, or the 
												meanest accountant, may number 
												and register them. It is justly 
												observed by Dr. Dodd, that “the 
												emphasis of this passage 
												consists in the elegance of the 
												metaphors.” The first, taken 
												from leanness, destroying the 
												fat, and marring the beauty of 
												the human form, well describes 
												that terrible plague which 
												destroyed the flower of the 
												Assyrian host. The second, taken 
												from fire, which, with 
												unconquerable fury, in a short 
												time reduces combustible matter 
												to ashes, gives us a striking 
												picture of the quick and almost 
												instantaneous ruin brought on 
												that army, by the irresistible 
												power of the destroying angel, 
												especially as that fire is 
												represented as kindled by the 
												light of Israel. And the third 
												metaphor of the thorns and 
												briers, which are so far from 
												having any power to withstand 
												the fury of the flames, that 
												they provoke and feed it, 
												affords us a lively emblem of 
												the utter inability of the 
												Assyrian monarch, or his mighty 
												host, to make the least 
												resistance against that divine 
												vengeance which their crimes had 
												merited.
 
 
 Verse 20
 Isaiah 10:20. And it shall come 
												to pass, &c. — The prophet 
												having, 1st, Explained the cause 
												for which God had decreed to 
												permit the Assyrians to have 
												such power over his people, 
												namely, for the punishment of 
												hypocrites, and the purification 
												of his church; and having also 
												shown the crimes which the kings 
												of Assyria would commit in 
												executing his judgments, and the 
												punishment ordained for them, 
												Isaiah 10:6-12; and having, 2d, 
												Confirmed these things, and 
												given a new exhibition of the 
												pride of the Assyrian, with a 
												yet fuller declaration of the 
												divine judgment upon him, Isaiah 
												10:13-19; proceeds now, 3d, To 
												predict, that a two-fold 
												consequence, friendly to the 
												state of the church, should 
												arise from this memorable 
												judgment; opposed to the 
												two-fold vice of the people, 
												before the execution of it. 1st, 
												There were among them men 
												fearing God, but who yet 
												regarded the power of the 
												Assyrian with greater fear than 
												they ought. These, by this great 
												deliverance granted to the 
												church, would be henceforth 
												confirmed, as to their faith and 
												confidence in the power and 
												goodness of God. 2d, There were, 
												besides these, many others 
												totally alienated from God, who, 
												by means of this great miracle, 
												would be brought to repentance, 
												and a serious acknowledgment of 
												the God of Israel. Nay, not only 
												the pious of those, but of 
												future times, would, by this 
												means, be confirmed in their 
												faith, and adherence to the true 
												God. Thus the prophet: Such as 
												are escaped of the house of 
												Jacob — Such Jews as shall be 
												preserved from that sweeping 
												Assyrian scourge, by which great 
												numbers, both of Israel and 
												Judah, shall be destroyed, and 
												from the succeeding calamities. 
												For that this place looks beyond 
												the deliverance from the 
												Assyrian army, unto the times of 
												the New Testament, seems 
												probable, 1st, From the 
												following verses, which belong 
												to that time, as we shall see: 
												2d, From the state of the Jewish 
												nation, which, after that 
												deliverance, continued to be 
												very corrupt, and averse from 
												that reformation, which Hezekiah 
												and Josiah prosecuted with all 
												their might; and therefore the 
												body of that people had not yet 
												learned this lesson, of 
												sincerely trusting in God alone. 
												3d, From St. Paul’s explication 
												and application of these words, 
												Romans 9:27. Shall no more stay 
												upon him that smote them — Shall 
												learn by this judgment, not to 
												trust to the Assyrians, or any 
												other allies, for help, as Ahaz 
												and his people now did; but 
												shall stay upon the Lord in 
												truth — Not by profession only, 
												but sincerely.
 
 Verses 21-23
 Isaiah 10:21-23. The remnant 
												shall return — Hebrew, שׁאר 
												ישׁוב, shear- jashub, the name 
												given to one of the prophet’s 
												sons, (see Isaiah 7:3,) in 
												confirmation of the truth of 
												God’s promises. It may be 
												rendered, as here, the remnant, 
												or, a remnant, or, but a 
												remnant, shall return; unto the 
												mighty God — Hebrew, אל גבור, 
												the very appellation given to 
												Christ, Isaiah 9:6. For though 
												thy people Israel — Or, thy 
												people, O Israel; to whom the 
												prophet, by an apostrophe, 
												directs his speech; be as the 
												sand, &c., yet a remnant — Or, a 
												remnant only, as before; shall 
												return — For that this is a 
												threatening in respect of some, 
												as well as a promise in respect 
												of others, is evident from the 
												rest of this, and from the 
												following verse. The consumption 
												decreed shall overflow — God’s 
												judgments are said to overflow 
												when they spread generally, the 
												metaphor being taken from an 
												inundation that sweeps all 
												before it. The destruction of 
												the people of Israel was already 
												decreed by the fixed counsel of 
												God, and therefore must needs be 
												executed, and like a deluge 
												overflow them, with, or in 
												righteousness, as the word is 
												rendered Romans 9:28, that is, 
												with justice, and yet with 
												clemency, inasmuch as he spared 
												a considerable remnant of them, 
												when he might have destroyed 
												them utterly. In the midst of 
												the land — In all the parts of 
												the land, not excepting 
												Jerusalem, which was to be 
												preserved in the Assyrian 
												invasion. Bishop Lowth 
												translates these verses, “Though 
												thy people, O Israel, shall be 
												as the sand of the sea, a 
												remnant of them only shall 
												return. The consummation decided 
												overfloweth with strict justice: 
												For a full and decisive decree 
												shall Jehovah, the Lord of 
												hosts, accomplish in the midst 
												of the land.” The prophet’s 
												affirming, that only a remnant 
												of Judah and Ephraim should be 
												preserved, and return in true 
												repentance to God, might justly 
												cause wonder and offence, both 
												to Jews and Israelites, at the 
												time when he spoke these things: 
												for it implied that far the 
												greater part of the people 
												should perish, which they must 
												have conceived highly 
												improbable, especially as they 
												were at that time very numerous 
												and flourishing. The prophet, 
												therefore, declares repeatedly, 
												and more explicitly, that God 
												had determined, by an absolute 
												and precise decree, thus to 
												exercise his justice and 
												severity upon them. This, it is 
												evident, is the sense of the 
												present passage, though there is 
												some difficulty in the 
												expressions. This prophecy was, 
												in part, fulfilled at the 
												Babylonish captivity, but there 
												can be no doubt that it has also 
												a reference to the times of the 
												Messiah: see note on Romans 
												9:27. Indeed, as Lowth observes, 
												the remnant, so miraculously 
												preserved in Jerusalem from 
												Sennacherib’s invasion, were a 
												type or figure of that small 
												number of converts under the 
												gospel, styled σωζομενοι, (Acts 
												2:47,) such as should be saved, 
												namely, such as should escape 
												the vengeance which fell upon 
												the main body of the Jewish 
												nation, for their sin in 
												rejecting Christ. And there 
												shall be another remnant of them 
												that shall be saved in the 
												latter days of the Christian 
												Church.
 
 
 Verse 24
 Isaiah 10:24. Therefore, &c. — 
												We have here the fourth part of 
												the enarration, or unfolding of 
												the proposition, mentioned 
												Isaiah 10:5, namely, the 
												application of it to the 
												consolation of the people of 
												God: to which, having digressed 
												a little, the prophet returns, 
												it being the true and proper 
												scope of his discourse, to 
												comfort the pious with respect 
												to the evils that threatened 
												their republic. The words are an 
												inference, not from the verses 
												immediately foregoing, but from 
												the whole prophecy: as if he had 
												said, Seeing the Assyrian shall 
												be destroyed, and the remnant of 
												my people preserved and 
												restored, thus saith the Lord 
												God of hosts — The Lord of all 
												the armies of earth and heaven, 
												the God superior to all human, 
												yea, to all crested power; O my 
												people that dwellest in Zion — 
												Where I dwell; where are the 
												ordinances of my worship and 
												service, my temple, my priests; 
												the thrones of justice which I 
												have established, and the 
												princes of the house of David 
												mine anointed; where my people 
												assemble to worship me, and 
												where I am present to defend 
												them: Be not afraid of the 
												Assyrian — A man that shall die, 
												the son of man that shall be as 
												grass; forgetting the Lord thy 
												maker, that stretched forth the 
												heavens, and laid the 
												foundations of the earth. With 
												his staff indeed shall he smite 
												thee, (as Bishop Lowth 
												translates it,) and his rod 
												shall he lift up against thee. 
												He shall threaten and correct, 
												yea, afflict thee, but not 
												destroy thee; after the manner 
												of Egypt — As the Egyptians 
												formerly did, and with the same 
												ill success to themselves, and 
												comfortable issue to you.
 
 Verse 25-26
 Isaiah 10:25-26. For yet a very 
												little while, &c. — Here the 
												prophet proceeds to assign the 
												reasons why the Lord would not 
												have his people to fear the 
												Assyrians, because, in a short 
												time, he would take vengeance 
												upon them, and that in a very 
												singular and extraordinary 
												manner, as he did upon the 
												Midianites and Egyptians: the 
												consequence of which would be 
												the removal of the yoke now 
												imposed, or to be imposed upon 
												them. The indignation — My 
												displeasure at my people, which 
												is the rod and staff in their 
												hand, Isaiah 10:5; shall cease — 
												And, when it ceaseth, they will 
												be disarmed, and disabled from 
												doing any farther mischief. And 
												mine anger in their destruction 
												— Hebrew, על תבליתם, upon, or, 
												with their destruction, as Dr. 
												Waterland properly renders the 
												words, namely, the destruction 
												of the Assyrians. The enemy that 
												threatens and afflicts God’s 
												people, shall himself be 
												reckoned with and punished. The 
												rod wherewith God corrected them 
												shall not only be laid aside, 
												but put into the fire, and it 
												shall appear by its destruction 
												that his anger is turned away 
												from them. The reader will 
												recollect that, upon the 
												destruction of the Assyrian 
												army, the calamities wherewith 
												God had chastised his people in 
												a great measure ceased, at least 
												for a time. The Lord of hosts — 
												Who is well able; shall stir up 
												a scourge for him — He lifted up 
												his staff against Zion; and God 
												will now lift up a scourge for 
												him: he was a terror to God’s 
												people, and God will be a terror 
												to him. The destroying angel 
												shall be his scourge, which he 
												can neither flee from nor 
												contend with. According to the 
												slaughter of Midian — Whom God 
												slew suddenly and unexpectedly 
												in the night. At the rock of 
												Oreb — Upon which one of their 
												chief princes was slain, and 
												nigh unto which the Midianites 
												were destroyed. And as his rod 
												was upon the sea — To divide it, 
												and make way for thy 
												deliverance, and for the 
												destruction of the Egyptians. So 
												shall he lift it up after the 
												manner of Egypt — As he did in 
												Egypt, to bring his plagues upon 
												that land and people. Thus the 
												prophet, for the encouragement 
												of God’s people, quotes 
												precedents, and puts them in 
												mind of what God had done 
												formerly against the enemies of 
												his church, who were very strong 
												and formidable, but were brought 
												to ruin. Respecting the last 
												clause of this verse, “I think,” 
												says Bishop Lowth, “there is a 
												designed ambiguity in these 
												words. Sennacherib, soon after 
												his return from his Egyptian 
												expedition, which, I imagine, 
												took him up three years, 
												invested Jerusalem. He is 
												represented by the prophet as 
												lifting up his rod, in his march 
												from Egypt, and threatening the 
												people of God, as Pharaoh and 
												the Egyptians had done, when 
												they pursued them to the Red 
												sea. But God, in his turn, will 
												lift up his rod, as he did at 
												that time over the sea, in the 
												way, or, after the manner of 
												Egypt: and as Sennacherib had 
												imitated the Egyptians in his 
												threats, and came full of rage 
												against them from the same 
												quarter; so God will act over 
												again the same part that he had 
												taken formerly in Egypt, and 
												overthrow their enemies in as 
												signal a manner.”
 
 Verse 27
 Isaiah 10:27. In that day his 
												burden shall be taken away, &c. 
												— The burden imposed on the Jews 
												by the Assyrian. They shall not 
												only be eased of the Assyrian 
												army, now quartered upon them, 
												and which was a grievous yoke 
												and burden on them; but they 
												shall no more pay that tribute 
												to the king of Assyria which, 
												before this invasion, he had 
												exacted from them, 2 Kings 
												18:14; shall no longer be at his 
												service, nor lie at his mercy, 
												as they had done; nor shall he 
												ever again put the country under 
												contribution. Perhaps, as some 
												think, the promise may look to 
												the deliverance of the Jews from 
												the captivity of Babylon, if not 
												also to the redemption of 
												believers from the tyranny of 
												sin and Satan. Because of the 
												anointing — Hebrew, מפני שׁמן, 
												literally, Because of, from 
												before, or, from the presence 
												of, the oil, ointment, or 
												fatness. Leigh says, “Est nomen 
												generale ad omnem pinguedinem 
												sive naturalem, sive conditam: 
												It is a general name for every 
												kind of fatness, whether natural 
												or artificial.” Hence some 
												translate the sentence, “The 
												yoke shall be loosed because of 
												the fatness;” supposing the 
												meaning to be, that the affairs 
												of the Jews would be in so good 
												a condition, signified by 
												fatness, after this destruction 
												of the Assyrian army, that the 
												Assyrians would not pretend any 
												longer to lay any burden of 
												tribute, or any impositions upon 
												them, as they had done, ever 
												since Ahaz put himself under 
												their protection, and, as it 
												were, made a surrender of 
												himself and people to them, to 
												become tributary to them. But 
												the common interpretation given 
												of the text seems preferable, 
												namely, The yoke shall be 
												destroyed, because of the (oil, 
												unction, or) anointing — That 
												is, out of regard to the holy 
												unction, which God had 
												established among his people. 
												Or, for the preservation of the 
												priesthood and kingdom, priests 
												and kings being both initiated 
												into their offices by the 
												ceremony of anointing. The Jews, 
												therefore, and some others, 
												apply this to Hezekiah, who was 
												the anointed of the Lord, an 
												active reformer, and very dear 
												to God, and in answer to whose 
												prayers, as we read, (Isaiah 
												37:15,) God gave this 
												deliverance. But possibly it 
												might be better understood of 
												David, who is often mentioned in 
												Scripture by the name of God’s 
												anointed; and for whose sake God 
												gave many deliverances to the 
												succeeding kings and ages, as is 
												expressly affirmed 1 Kings 
												11:32; 1 Kings 11:34. And, which 
												is more considerable, God 
												declares that he would give this 
												very deliverance from the 
												Assyrian for David’s sake, 2 
												Kings 19:34; 2 Kings 20:6. But 
												the Messiah is principally 
												intended, of whom David was but 
												a type; and who was in a 
												particular manner anointed above 
												his fellows, as is said Psalms 
												45:7. For he is the foundation 
												of all the promises, (2 
												Corinthians 1:20,) and of all 
												the deliverances and mercies 
												granted to God’s people in all 
												ages. Vitringa is of opinion, 
												that “the prophet, in this last 
												passage, rises in his ideas; 
												and, having expressed the 
												temporal deliverance of the 
												church in the preceding clauses, 
												here seals up the period with a 
												consolatory clause, admonishing 
												the pious of their deliverance 
												from a spiritual yoke, that is, 
												from all the power of sin and 
												Satan, and their vindication 
												into the full and perfect 
												liberty of the sons of God, 
												through Jesus Christ, the king 
												of his church, who, for this 
												purpose, would communicate an 
												abundance of the anointing 
												spirit of wisdom, knowledge, 
												prayer, liberty, and adoption: 
												see Zechariah 4:6.” The reader 
												may see an explication and 
												defence of this interpretation 
												in Vitringa on the place.
 
 
 Verses 28-32
 Isaiah 10:28-32. He is come to 
												Aiath — Here the prophet returns 
												to his former discourse 
												concerning Sennacherib’s 
												invasion of Judah, of whose 
												march toward Jerusalem, the 
												route of his army, and their 
												several stations, he gives so 
												minute a detail, that though the 
												description is a prophecy, he 
												seems rather to speak like an 
												historian, who is relating facts 
												already past. This is the fifth 
												part of the prophet’s discourse, 
												in which we have, 1st, the 
												expedition of the Assyrian 
												monarch, described in the most 
												lively manner in these verses; 
												and, 2d, the unhappy success of 
												that expedition, with its 
												consequences, Isaiah 10:33-34. 
												The several places here 
												mentioned, are those where 
												Sennacherib may be supposed to 
												have pitched his camp; and were 
												most of them towns of Benjamin, 
												though some were in Judah, as 
												appears from other scriptures. 
												He is passed to Migron — Namely, 
												Sennacherib, in his way to 
												Jerusalem. At Michmash he hath 
												laid up his carriages — Leaving 
												such things there as were less 
												necessary, that so he might 
												march with more expedition. They 
												are gone over the passage — Some 
												considerable passage, then well 
												known. Gibeah of Saul is fled — 
												The people fled to Jerusalem for 
												fear of the Assyrians. Lift up 
												thy voice, O daughter of Gallim 
												— Jerusalem was the mother city, 
												and lesser towns were commonly 
												called her daughters. O poor 
												Anathoth — Hebrew, ענתות עניה, 
												Aniah Anathoth, where the former 
												word, rendered poor, relates to 
												the signification of Anathoth; 
												“a beauty frequently to be met 
												with in the original of the 
												sacred Scriptures, but which can 
												seldom be preserved in any 
												translation.” He shall shake his 
												hand against the mount of Zion — 
												By way of commination. But, 
												withal, the prophet intimates, 
												that he should be able to do no 
												more against it; and that there 
												his proud waves should be 
												stayed, as is declared in the 
												following verses, and in the 
												history.
 
 Verse 33-34
 Isaiah 10:33-34. The Lord of 
												hosts shall lop the bough — The 
												top bough, Sennacherib; with 
												terror — Hebrew, 
												במערצהbemagnaratza, with a 
												dreadful crash, as Bishop Lowth 
												renders it, expressed by the 
												very sound of the Hebrew word; 
												by a most terrible and 
												unexpected blow; and the high 
												ones, &c. — The lofty boughs, 
												Hebrew, ורמי הקומהexcelsi 
												statura, the high of stature: 
												that is, his valiant soldiers, 
												or the great commanders of his 
												army, compared to the tall trees 
												of a forest; shall be hewn down 
												— By a sudden and irresistible 
												stroke; and the haughty — The 
												proud, self- confident boasters, 
												elati animo, the high-minded, as 
												חגבהיםsignifies; shall be 
												humbled — Shall be laid 
												motionless in the dust, namely, 
												by the invisible power of the 
												destroying angel. And he shall 
												cut down the thickets, &c., with 
												iron — Or, as with iron, as the 
												trees of the forest are cut down 
												with instruments of iron; and 
												Lebanon — Or, his Lebanon, the 
												Assyrian army, which being 
												before compared to a forest, and 
												being called his Carmel in the 
												Hebrew text, (Isaiah 10:18,) may 
												very fitly, upon the same 
												ground, be called his Lebanon 
												here. Shall fall by a mighty one 
												— By a mighty angel, Isaiah 
												37:36.
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