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												Verse 1Isaiah 28:1. Wo, &c. — The 
												second discourse of the third 
												book of Isaiah’s prophecies, 
												according to Vitringa, begins 
												here, and is continued to the 
												end of the thirty-third chapter. 
												He supposes that the whole of it 
												was delivered before the 
												expedition of Sennacherib, and 
												on occasion of some solemn 
												embassy sent to Egypt to implore 
												the help of the Egyptians 
												against the Assyrians. To the 
												crown of pride — The proud state 
												and kingdom of the ten tribes, 
												commonly called Ephraim; or, as 
												some think, Samaria, the capital 
												city, is chiefly intended, which 
												was situated, says Maundrell, 
												“on a long mount of an oval 
												figure; having first a fruitful 
												valley, and then a ring, or 
												crown, of hills running round 
												about it.” Journey from Aleppo, 
												p. 59. It is thought that the 
												prophet alludes to the crown of 
												flowers which used to be worn by 
												the drunkards in their revels; 
												“an image not unfrequently made 
												use of by the prophets, to 
												convey a strong idea of the 
												universal depravity and folly of 
												the nation.” To the drunkards of 
												Ephraim — Having many and 
												excellent vines among them, the 
												Ephraimites were much exposed to 
												this sin, and very frequently 
												guilty of it, Isaiah 28:7; Hosea 
												7:5; Amos 6:6. Whose glorious 
												beauty is a fading flower — 
												Whose glory and greatness shall 
												suddenly wither and perish, like 
												the garlands of flowers 
												wherewith they crown their 
												heads, amidst their intoxicating 
												cups. Which are on the head of 
												the fat valleys — Which proud 
												and drunken Israelites have 
												their common and chief abode in 
												Samaria, the head of the 
												kingdom, and seated at the head 
												of fat and rich valleys which 
												encompassed it.
 
 
 Verses 2-4
 Isaiah 28:2-4. Behold, the Lord 
												hath — Namely, at his command, 
												prepared and ready to execute 
												his judgments; a mighty and 
												strong one — Shalmaneser, the 
												king of Assyria; which, as a 
												tempest of hail, &c., shall cast 
												down — The crown of pride, to 
												the earth, by his hand — By the 
												hand of God, which shall 
												strengthen him in this work. The 
												crown, the drunkards, shall be 
												trodden under feet — The 
												expression is emphatical; the 
												crown which was upon their own 
												heads shall be trodden under the 
												feet of others; and they, whose 
												drunkenness made them stagger 
												and fall to the ground, shall be 
												trodden down there. The glorious 
												beauty shall be as the hasty 
												fruit — That is, the first ripe 
												fruit, which, coming before the 
												season, and before other fruits, 
												is most acceptable. Which he 
												that seeth it eateth up — Which, 
												as soon as a man sees, he plucks 
												it off and devours it as soon as 
												he can get it into his hand. And 
												so shall it be with Ephraim’s 
												glory, which his enemies shall 
												covet and spoil, and devour 
												greedily. “The image,” says 
												Bishop Lowth, “expresses, in the 
												strongest manner, the great ease 
												with which the Assyrians should 
												take the city and the whole 
												kingdom, and the avidity with 
												which they should seize the rich 
												prey without resistance.”
 
 Verse 5-6
 Isaiah 28:5-6. “Thus far,” says 
												Bishop Lowth, “the prophecy 
												relates to the Israelites, and 
												manifestly denounces their 
												approaching destruction by 
												Shalmaneser. Here it turns to 
												the two tribes of Judah and 
												Benjamin, the remnant of God’s 
												people, who were to continue a 
												kingdom after the final 
												captivity of the Israelites. It 
												begins with a favourable 
												prognostication of their affairs 
												under Hezekiah: but soon changes 
												to reproofs and threatenings, 
												for their intemperance, 
												disobedience, and profaneness.” 
												In that day — When the kingdom 
												of Israel shall be utterly 
												destroyed; the Lord of hosts 
												shall be for a crown of glory, 
												&c. — Shall give eminent glory 
												and beauty unto the residue of 
												his people — Unto the kingdom of 
												Judah, who shall continue in 
												their own country, when Israel 
												is carried into captivity. And 
												for a spirit of judgment, &c. — 
												He explains how, or wherein, God 
												would glorify and beautify them, 
												even by giving wisdom to their 
												rulers, and courage to their 
												soldiers; which two things 
												contribute much to the strength, 
												safety, and glory of a nation. 
												To them that turn the battle to 
												the gate — Who not only drive 
												their enemies from their land, 
												but pursue them into their own 
												lands, and besiege them in their 
												own cities.
 
 Verse 7
 Isaiah 28:7. But they also have 
												erred — But, alas! Judah is 
												guilty of the same sins with 
												Israel, therefore they also must 
												expect the same calamities, of 
												which he speaks afterward. The 
												priest — To whom strong drink 
												was expressly forbidden in the 
												time of their sacred 
												ministrations; and the prophet — 
												The teachers, who should have 
												been patterns of sobriety to the 
												people, and to whom sobriety was 
												absolutely necessary for the 
												right discharge of their office; 
												have erred — In their 
												conversation and in their holy 
												administrations. They are 
												swallowed up of wine — They are, 
												as we say, drowned in it. They 
												err in vision — The prophets 
												miscarry in their sacred 
												employment of prophesying or 
												teaching, which is sometimes 
												called vision. They stumble in 
												judgment — The priests mistake 
												in pronouncing the sentence of 
												the law, which was their duty.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Isaiah 28:9-10. Whom shall he — 
												Namely, God, or his prophet, or 
												minister; teach knowledge? and 
												whom shall he make to understand 
												doctrine? — Who is there among 
												this people, that are capable 
												and willing to be taught the 
												good knowledge of God? them that 
												are wearied from the milk, &c. — 
												A minister may as soon teach a 
												young child as these men. For 
												precept must be upon precept, 
												&c. — They must be taught like 
												little children, slowly, and 
												with leisure, the same things 
												being often repeated, because of 
												their great dulness. Line upon 
												line — One line of the book 
												after another, as children are 
												taught to read.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Isaiah 28:11-12. For — Or, 
												rather, therefore, as the 
												particle כיis often used. For 
												the prophet here evidently 
												intends to express the 
												punishment of their dulness. 
												With stammering lips, and 
												another tongue — By people of a 
												strange language, whom he will 
												bring among them, and into whose 
												power he will deliver them; will 
												he speak to this people — Seeing 
												they will not hear him speaking 
												by his prophets and ministers, 
												in their own language, they 
												shall hear their enemies 
												speaking to them in a strange 
												language. It was a great 
												aggravation of the misery of the 
												Jews, during their captivity, 
												that they did not understand the 
												language of the Chaldeans, whose 
												captives they were. To whom he 
												said — To which people, the 
												Lord, by his ministers, said, 
												This — This doctrine, or the 
												word of the Lord, as it follows, 
												Isaiah 28:13; is the rest — The 
												only way, in the observance of 
												which you will find rest. 
												Wherewith, &c. — The word 
												wherewith is supplied by our 
												translators, there being nothing 
												for it in the Hebrew, which is, 
												cause ye the weary to rest — 
												Namely, your weary minds and 
												weary country. As if he had 
												said, As rest is offered you by 
												the prophets in God’s name, do 
												you embrace it; which is to be 
												done by hearkening to God’s 
												word. So shall this people, 
												which hath been so often, and so 
												long, wearied and harassed by 
												great and manifold calamities, 
												find rest and peace. Yet they 
												would not hear — They were 
												wilfully ignorant, and 
												obstinately refused the very 
												means of instruction.
 
 
 Verse 13
 Isaiah 28:13. But the word of 
												the Lord was unto them, &c. — 
												The sense of the passage thus 
												rendered, may be, that they 
												spake of God’s word with scorn 
												and contempt, repeating the 
												prophet’s words, (which are as 
												peculiar in sound, as they are 
												strong and expressive in sense, 
												קו לקו, קו לקו, צו לצו, צו לצו, 
												tzav latzav, tzav latzav, kav 
												lakav, kav lakav,) in a scoffing 
												manner, and with a ridiculous 
												tone of voice; as if they had 
												said, It seems the prophet takes 
												us to be mere children, that 
												need to be taught the very 
												rudiments of knowledge, and that 
												but slowly. Precept upon 
												precept, line upon line, &c. — 
												That these were scornful men and 
												mockers, is affirmed Isaiah 
												28:14; Isaiah 28:22; and, as 
												scoffers frequently catch the 
												words out of other men’s mouths, 
												and use them in the way of 
												derision; so it may be thought 
												they did with the prophet’s 
												words. But the clause may be 
												rendered a little otherwise, as 
												indeed it is by divers learned 
												men, thus: And the word of the 
												Lord shall be unto them, precept 
												upon precept, &c.; as this 
												method has been used, and was 
												altogether necessary for them, 
												so it still is, and for the 
												future shall be. As they were 
												children in understanding, they 
												shall continue to be such; they 
												shall be ever learning, and 
												never come to the knowledge of 
												the truth; as they formerly 
												would not, so now they shall not 
												profit by the word, and their 
												sin shall be their punishment. 
												That they may, or might go, and 
												fall backward — This will be the 
												event, or consequence of their 
												sin: they will fall backward, 
												which is the worst and most 
												dangerous way of falling; and so 
												be broken to pieces.
 
 Verse 14-15
 Isaiah 28:14-15. Wherefore hear, 
												ye scornful men — Who make a 
												mock at sin, and at God’s word 
												and threatenings, and who doubt 
												not that by your crafty 
												counsels, and human efforts, you 
												shall escape God’s judgments; 
												who have said — In your hearts; 
												we have made a covenant with 
												death, &c. — We are as safe from 
												death and hell, or the grave, 
												(as the word שׁאולhere means,) 
												as if they had entered into 
												covenant with us, that they 
												would not invade us. “To be in 
												covenant with any thing, is a 
												kind of proverbial expression to 
												denote perfect security from 
												evil, and mischief from it:” see 
												Job 5:23; Hosea 2:18. When the 
												overflowing scourge — The 
												calamity which the prophets 
												speak of as coming; shall pass 
												through — Namely, the land: if 
												it should pass through, which, 
												however, we do not believe it 
												will; it shall not come unto us 
												— We shall escape. For we have 
												made lies our refuge, &c. — 
												These words the prophet puts 
												into their mouths, as 
												declarative of the real nature 
												of their false confidence and 
												vain hopes of safety: as if he 
												had said, You are confident the 
												calamity shall not come to you, 
												because you have taken sanctuary 
												in a refuge of lies! You depend 
												on your vain idols, or on your 
												riches, or strength, or crafty 
												devices, which will all fail 
												you. Or, you hope to secure 
												yourselves by your arts of 
												cunning and falsehood, but you 
												will find yourselves 
												disappointed.
 
 Verse 16
 Isaiah 28:16. Therefore, thus 
												saith the Lord — Because your 
												refuges are vain and deceitful; 
												therefore I will direct you to a 
												better and surer refuge, which 
												will never fail those that trust 
												to it, which God hath prepared 
												in Zion. But if you shall 
												despise and reject that refuge, 
												which I now offer to you all; if 
												you will not believe, then know, 
												that I will lay judgment to the 
												line, &c., as it follows, Isaiah 
												28:17. Some think that in this 
												famous prophecy, Behold I lay in 
												Zion, &c., the prophet only 
												means to tell these scorners, 
												that God would protect 
												Jerusalem, but not them, whom he 
												would suffer to perish; and that 
												he “expresses the protection 
												which God would afford it under 
												the image of laying a foundation 
												for new walls, with the largest 
												and hardest stones, and those 
												most fit for the purpose, to 
												make it impregnable, and to 
												stand for ages.” But to 
												understand the prophet thus, is 
												to make him utter a false 
												prophecy, which was afterward 
												contradicted by facts. For 
												Jerusalem, whether we understand 
												thereby the city or its 
												inhabitants, was not protected, 
												but given up into the hands, 
												first of the Chaldeans, and then 
												of the Romans, to be destroyed. 
												Certainly, as Lowth observes, 
												“this prophecy cannot belong to 
												any but Christ, to whom it is 
												often applied in the New 
												Testament. But it may import 
												thus much, with respect to the 
												time wherein Isaiah lived, that 
												those should never be 
												disappointed who believed in 
												God, who had made peculiar 
												promises to his church, which 
												should be eminently fulfilled at 
												the coming of the Messiah, in 
												whom all God’s promises made to 
												his people should receive their 
												final accomplishment.” 
												Understood of Christ, the 
												interpretation of every 
												expression in the passage is 
												natural and easy; Behold I lay — 
												I have promised it, and in the 
												fulness of time will perform it; 
												in Zion — In my church; for a 
												foundation — Upon which I will 
												build my church, the foundation 
												of all the confidence, hope, and 
												comfort of my people; a stone — 
												Not Hezekiah, as some have 
												supposed, but the Messiah, as 
												appears, 1st, From those 
												passages of the Old Testament, 
												in which he is called a stone, 
												as Psalms 118:22; Isaiah 8:14; 
												Daniel 2:34-45; Zechariah 3:9. 
												2d, From those texts of the New 
												Testament, in which this 
												prophecy is directly expounded 
												of him, as Romans 9:32-33; 1 
												Peter 2:4. 3d, From the last 
												clause, wherein faith in this 
												stone is required, which is not 
												to be placed in any mere man, or 
												mere creature. A tried stone — 
												Which I have tried and approved, 
												as every way sufficient for a 
												foundation to support the 
												building. A precious 
												corner-stone — Uniting the 
												several parts of the building 
												together, making Ephraim and 
												Judah, and Jews and Gentiles, 
												though now implacable enemies, 
												one church, and giving not only 
												strength, but beauty and glory 
												to the building, as cornerstones 
												frequently do. A sure foundation 
												— Upon whom you may securely 
												rest; one who will not fail nor 
												deceive you, as your refuges of 
												lies will. He that believeth — 
												Namely, this promise, or places 
												his confidence in this stone, as 
												it is explained 1 Peter 2:6; 
												shall not make haste — Shall not 
												hastily catch at any way of 
												escaping his danger, whether it 
												be right or wrong, but shall 
												patiently wait upon God in his 
												way till he deliver him. The 
												words
 
 לא יחישׁ, here rendered, shall 
												not make haste, are by the LXX. 
												translated,
 
 ου μη καταισχυνθη, shall in no 
												wise be ashamed or confounded, 
												because precipitation, or haste, 
												commonly exposes men to shame 
												and confusion.
 
 Verse 17
 Isaiah 28:17. Judgment also will 
												I lay to the line, &c. — I will 
												execute just judgment, as it 
												were by a line and plummet 
												annexed to it; that is, with 
												exactness and care. I will 
												severely punish and utterly 
												destroy all who reject that 
												stone. For the line and plummet, 
												or the plumb-line, was not only 
												used in erecting buildings, but 
												also in pulling them down; those 
												parts of the building being thus 
												marked out which were to be 
												demolished. And the hail shall 
												sweep away the refuge of lies, 
												&c. — My judgments (which in the 
												Scriptures are compared to a 
												storm of hail or rain) shall 
												discover the vanity of all your 
												crafty and wicked devices, and 
												shall sweep you away with the 
												besom of destruction in spite of 
												them.
 
 Verse 18-19
 Isaiah 28:18-19. And your 
												covenant with death shall be 
												disannulled — Made void, or of 
												none effect. Ye shall be trodden 
												down — Namely, by the 
												overflowing scourge, which you 
												flattered yourselves should not 
												come unto you. From the time 
												that it goeth forth — Namely, 
												from me into the land, it shall 
												assuredly, and with the first, 
												seize upon and carry away you 
												scoffers. Morning by morning it 
												shall pass over, &c. — It shall 
												not only come to you, but it 
												shall abide upon you; and when 
												it hath passed over you, it 
												shall return again to you, 
												morning after morning, and shall 
												follow you day and night, 
												without giving you the least 
												respite. It shall be a vexation 
												to understand the report — So 
												dreadful shall the judgment be, 
												that it shall strike you with 
												horror when you only hear the 
												rumour of its approach.
 
 Verse 20-21
 Isaiah 28:20-21. For the bed is 
												shorter, &c. — For those lying 
												refuges, to which you trust, 
												will not be able to give you 
												that protection which you expect 
												from them, no more than a man 
												can stretch himself upon a bed 
												that is too short for him. For 
												the Lord shall rise up as in 
												mount Perazim — Where he fought 
												against the Philistines, 2 
												Samuel 5:20. He shall be wroth 
												as in Gibeon — Where he fought 
												against the Canaanites, (Joshua 
												10:10, &c.,) and afterward 
												against the Philistines, 1 
												Chronicles 14:16. That he may do 
												his strange work — For this work 
												of bringing total destruction 
												upon Israel was contrary to the 
												benignity of his own nature, and 
												to the usual way of dealing with 
												his people. The calamities and 
												alarms occasioned by the 
												Assyrian invasion under 
												Sennacherib were a partial 
												accomplishment of this prophecy. 
												It was still more fully 
												accomplished in the destruction 
												of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, 
												and the Babylonish captivity: 
												but certainly it did not receive 
												its perfect fulfilment till the 
												destruction of that city, and of 
												the church and state of the Jews 
												by the Romans, after their 
												obstinate rejection of their 
												Messiah, the corner- stone, here 
												spoken of. This alone fully 
												answers the import of these 
												awful predictions of divine 
												wrath and vengeance.
 
 Verse 22
 Isaiah 28:22. Now therefore be 
												not mockers — For your own sakes 
												do not make a mock of God’s word 
												and threatenings, as you use to 
												do. Lest your bands be made 
												strong — Lest thereby you make 
												the judgments of God, which are 
												often compared to bands, more 
												sure and unavoidable, and more 
												severe and terrible, as bands 
												are when they are tied faster 
												and more strongly upon a 
												prisoner. For I have heard from 
												the Lord a consumption, &c. — 
												God hath assured me that he will 
												utterly root out the people of 
												Israel, the kingdom of the ten 
												tribes; as indeed he did in 
												Hezekiah’s reign, and the Jews, 
												the kingdom of the two tribes, 
												in the reign of Zedekiah.
 
 Verses 23-25
 Isaiah 28:23-25. Give ye ear — 
												Observe what I say, and do you 
												judge if it be not reasonable. 
												“We have here the last member of 
												this section, in which this 
												severe judgment of God, 
												denounced in the preceding 
												verses, is defended by a parable 
												taken from agriculture, wherein 
												the prophet represents 
												allegorically the intentions and 
												methods of the divine 
												judgments.” “As the husbandman 
												uses various methods in 
												preparing his land, and adapting 
												it to the several kinds of seed 
												to be sown, with a due 
												observation of times and 
												seasons; and when he hath 
												gathered in his harvest, employs 
												methods as various in separating 
												the corn from the straw and the 
												chaff by different instruments, 
												according to the nature of the 
												different sorts of grain; so 
												God, with unerring wisdom and 
												with strict justice, instructs, 
												admonishes, and corrects his 
												people; chastises and punishes 
												them in various ways, as the 
												exigence of the case requires; 
												now more moderately, now more 
												severely; always tempering 
												judgment with mercy; in order to 
												reclaim the wicked, to improve 
												the good; and finally, to 
												separate the one from the 
												other.” — Bishop Lowth.
 
 Verse 26
 Isaiah 28:26. For his God doth 
												instruct him — The art of 
												husbandry is so necessary for 
												the support of human life, that 
												all men have ascribed its 
												original to God as the inventor 
												and ordainer of it. The Most 
												High hath ordained husbandry, 
												saith the son of Sirach, Sirach 
												7:15. In like manner, Virgil, 
												Georg., lib. 1. line 121:
 
 “ — — — — — — — — — Pater ipse 
												colendi Haud facilem esse viam 
												voluit, primusq; per artem Movit 
												agros — — .”
 
 “Himself invented first the 
												shining share, And whetted human 
												industry by care;
 
 Himself did handicrafts and arts 
												ordain;
 
 Nor suffer’d sloth to rust his 
												active reign.”
 
 By other heathen, the invention 
												of agriculture is ascribed to 
												the goddess Ceres.
 
 Verses 27-29
 Isaiah 28:27-29. “Four methods 
												of thrashing are here mentioned, 
												by different instruments: the 
												flail, the drag, the wain, and 
												the treading of cattle. The 
												staff, or flail, was used for 
												the grain that was too tender to 
												be treated in the other methods. 
												The drag consisted of a sort of 
												frame of strong planks, made 
												rough at the bottom, with hard 
												stones or iron: it was drawn by 
												horses or oxen over the 
												corn-sheaves spread on the 
												floor, the driver sitting upon 
												it. The wain was much like the 
												former, but had wheels with iron 
												teeth, or edges, like a saw. 
												This not only forced out the 
												grain, but cut the straw in 
												pieces for fodder for the 
												cattle; for in the eastern 
												countries they have no hay. The 
												last method is well known from 
												the law of Moses, which forbids 
												the ox to be muzzled when he 
												treadeth out the corn, 
												Deuteronomy 25:4.” — Bishop 
												Lowth. This also cometh from the 
												Lord of hosts, &c. — This part 
												of the husbandman’s discretion 
												expressed in these verses, as 
												well as that expressed in Isaiah 
												28:24-25. These words contain 
												the application of the 
												similitude. The husbandman 
												manages his affairs with common 
												discretion; but God governs the 
												world and his church with 
												wonderful wisdom: he is great 
												and marvellous, both in the 
												contrivance of things, and in 
												the execution of them.
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