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												Verse 1Isaiah 29:1. Wo to Ariel — This 
												word signifies a strong lion, or 
												the lion of God, and is used 
												concerning lion-like men, as it 
												is rendered 1 Chronicles 11:22; 
												and of God’s altar, as it is 
												translated Ezekiel 43:15-16; 
												which seems to be thus called, 
												because it devoured and consumed 
												the sacrifices put upon it, as 
												greedily and as irresistibly as 
												the lion doth his prey. “That 
												Jerusalem is here called by this 
												name,” says Bishop Lowth, “is 
												very certain; but the reason of 
												this name, and the meaning of 
												it, as applied to Jerusalem, are 
												very obscure and doubtful. Some, 
												with the Chaldee, suppose it to 
												be taken from the hearth of the 
												great altar of burnt-offerings, 
												which Ezekiel plainly calls by 
												the same name; and that 
												Jerusalem is here considered as 
												the seat of the fire of God, אור 
												אל, which should issue from 
												thence to consume his enemies: 
												compare Isaiah 31:9. Some, 
												according to the common 
												derivation of the word, suppose 
												that it is called the lion of 
												God, or the strong lion, on 
												account of the strength of the 
												place, by which it was enabled 
												to resist and overcome all its 
												enemies. There are other 
												explanations of this name given, 
												but none that seems to be 
												perfectly satisfactory.” The 
												city where David dwelt — The 
												royal city, and seat of David 
												and his posterity, which is 
												probably here mentioned, because 
												this was the ground of their 
												confidence, and also to intimate 
												that their relation to David, 
												and their supposed interest in 
												the promises made to him and to 
												his seed, should not secure them 
												from the destruction here 
												threatened. Add ye year to year, 
												&c. — The prophet speaks 
												ironically: Go on year after 
												year, and kill sacrifices at the 
												appointed times, whereby you 
												think to appease me; but all 
												shall be in vain. For know, that 
												God will punish you for your 
												hypocritical worship, consisting 
												of mere form, destitute of true 
												piety. As the latter clause, 
												חגים ינקפו, is literally, Let 
												the feasts go round, it is 
												probable this discourse was 
												delivered at the time of some 
												great feast.
 
 Verse 2
 Isaiah 29:2. Yet will I distress 
												Ariel — Notwithstanding all your 
												sacrifices, by bringing and 
												strengthening her enemies 
												against her. And there shall be 
												heaviness and sorrow — Instead 
												of your present joy and 
												festivity. And it shall be to me 
												as Ariel — That is, either, 1st, 
												I will treat her like a strong 
												and fierce lion, which the 
												people, among whom it is, 
												endeavour by nets and pits, and 
												divers other ways, to take and 
												destroy. Or, 2d, I will make 
												Ariel the city like Ariel the 
												altar, filling it with 
												sacrifices, even of men, whom I 
												will slay in my anger; which act 
												of God is called his sacrifice, 
												Ezekiel 39:17-19. Agreeably to 
												this latter interpretation, 
												Bishop Lowth renders the clause, 
												It shall be unto me as the 
												hearth of the great altar: that 
												is, as he explains it, “all on 
												flame; as it was when taken by 
												the Chaldeans; or covered with 
												carcasses and blood, as when 
												taken by the Romans: an 
												intimation of which more distant 
												events, though not immediate 
												subjects of the prophecy, may 
												perhaps be given in this obscure 
												passage.”
 
 Verse 3-4
 Isaiah 29:3-4. And I will camp 
												against thee, &c. — That is, by 
												those enemies whom I will assist 
												and enable to take and destroy 
												thee. The prophet may here refer 
												to different sieges of 
												Jerusalem, that of Sennacherib, 
												that of the Chaldeans, or even 
												to that of the Romans. Thou 
												shalt be brought down — thy 
												speech shall be low — Thou, who 
												now speakest so loftily, shalt 
												be humbled, and in a submissive 
												manner, and with a low voice, 
												shalt beg the favour of thine 
												enemies. As of one that hath a 
												familiar spirit, out of the 
												ground — “That the souls of the 
												dead uttered a feeble, 
												stridulous sound, very different 
												from the natural human voice, 
												was a popular notion among the 
												heathen, as well as among the 
												Jews. This appears from several 
												passages of their poets, Homer, 
												Virgil, Horace. The pretenders 
												to the art of necromancy, who 
												were chiefly women, had an art 
												of speaking with a reigned 
												voice, so as to deceive those 
												who applied to them, by making 
												them believe that it was the 
												voice of the ghost. They had a 
												way of uttering sounds, as if 
												they were formed, not by the 
												organs of speech, but deep in 
												the chest, or in the belly, and 
												were thence called 
												εγγαστριμυθοι, ventriloqui. They 
												could make the voice seem to 
												come from beneath the ground, 
												from a distant part, in another 
												direction, and not from 
												themselves, the better to impose 
												upon those who consulted them. 
												From these arts of the 
												necromancers, the popular notion 
												seems to have arisen that the 
												ghost’s voice was a weak, 
												stridulous, almost an 
												inarticulate sort of sound, very 
												different from the speech of the 
												living.” — Bishop Lowth.
 
 Verses 5-7
 Isaiah 29:5-7. Moreover — Or, 
												rather, But, the multitude of 
												thy strangers — Of the strangers 
												that encamp and fight against 
												thee; shall be like small dust — 
												Dispersed by the least breath of 
												air; and the multitude of the 
												terrible ones — Of the Assyrian 
												army, terrible for courage and 
												ferocity; shall be as the chaff 
												that passeth away — Which is 
												quickly carried away by the 
												wind. Yea, at an instant, 
												suddenly — This dissipation and 
												destruction of thine enemies 
												shall be as instantaneous as it 
												is unexpected. Bishop Lowth, who 
												considers these verses as 
												containing “an admirable 
												description of the destruction 
												of Sennacherib’s army, with a 
												beautiful variety of the most 
												expressive and sublime images, 
												adapted to show the greatness, 
												the suddenness, and horror of 
												the event,” gives us the 
												following elegant and striking 
												translation of them, which will 
												give the reader a more just and 
												enlarged view of their meaning, 
												than any note wherewith we might 
												attempt to explain it: But the 
												multitude of the proud shall be 
												like the small dust; And like 
												the flitting chaff, the 
												multitude of the terrible: Yea, 
												the effect shall be momentary, 
												in an instant. From Jehovah 
												there shall be a sudden 
												visitation, With thunder, and 
												earthquake, and a mighty voice; 
												With storm, and tempest, and 
												flame of devouring fire. And 
												like as a dream, a vision of the 
												night, So shall it be with the 
												multitude of all the nations, 
												that fight against Ariel; And 
												all their armies, and their 
												towers, and those that distress 
												her. The reader will observe, 
												that this view of the passage 
												has the sanction of the Vulgate 
												version, and is approved by 
												Prebendary Lowth, Vitringa, Dr. 
												Waterland, Henry, and several 
												others. Some, however, think 
												that these verses should be 
												connected with the preceding, 
												and that the prophet continues 
												in them to describe the judgment 
												to be inflicted on Jerusalem.
 
 Verse 8
 Isaiah 29:8. “As when a hungry 
												man dreameth; and, lo! he 
												seemeth to eat; but he awaketh, 
												and his appetite is still 
												unsatisfied: and as a thirsty 
												man, &c. So shall it be with the 
												multitude of all the nations, 
												which have set themselves in 
												array against mount Zion.” Thus 
												Bishop Lowth. The Assyrians had 
												swallowed up Jerusalem in their 
												imagination: but God would 
												suddenly disappoint all their 
												hopes, and send them away empty 
												and confounded. For, the reader 
												will observe, “Sennacherib and 
												his mighty army are not here 
												compared to a dream, because of 
												their sudden disappearance; but 
												the disappointment of their 
												eager hopes is compared to what 
												happens to a hungry and thirsty 
												man, when he awakes from a 
												dream, in which fancy had 
												presented to him meat and drink 
												in abundance, and finds it 
												nothing but a vain illusion. The 
												comparison is elegant and 
												beautiful in the highest, 
												degree, well wrought up, and 
												perfectly suited to the end 
												proposed.”
 
 Verse 9-10
 Isaiah 29:9-10. Stay yourselves 
												and wonder — The prophet, having 
												described the temporal judgment 
												coming on the Jews, (see the 
												contents of the chapter,) 
												proceeds now to predict the 
												spiritual one, the first 
												gradation of which is contained 
												in these and the two following 
												verses, which both describe the 
												judgment and the consequence of 
												it. It is the same with that 
												predicted Isaiah 6:9-12; and 
												Isaiah 8:14-15. On which see the 
												notes. Hebrew, התמהמהו ותמהו, 
												Pause and be astonished. Stop 
												and consider the stupidity of 
												this people, and you cannot but 
												wonder at it. Cry ye out, and 
												cry — Through amazement and 
												horror. They are drunken, but 
												not with wine — But with 
												stupidity and folly, which makes 
												them, like drunken men, 
												insensible of their danger, and 
												not knowing what to do. For the 
												Lord hath poured out upon you — 
												Hath suffered to come upon you, 
												in a way of righteous judgment, 
												and as a punishment for your 
												loving, darkness rather than 
												light; the spirit of deep sleep 
												— Hardness of heart, and 
												insensibility of your danger and 
												misery. The prophets and your 
												rulers — Your magistrates and 
												ministers, whose blindness and 
												stupidity are a great curse to 
												the people; hath he covered — 
												Permitted to be covered with the 
												veil of ignorance and stupidity; 
												that is, he hath withdrawn his 
												abused light and grace from 
												them, so that they no more see 
												things in a true light than if a 
												thick veil were spread over 
												them. The prophets and seers 
												here mean the same persons.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Isaiah 29:11-12. And the vision 
												of all — Of all your prophets, 
												or every vision; is unto you as 
												the words of a book that is 
												sealed — Which no man can read 
												while it is sealed up, as books 
												then sometimes were, being in 
												the form of rolls. Which men 
												deliver to one that is learned — 
												That understands the language in 
												which the book is written; 
												saying, Read this — he saith, I 
												cannot; for it is sealed — Mere 
												human learning, without 
												supernatural illumination, will 
												not enable any man rightly to 
												understand the word of God, and 
												things divine: see 1 Corinthians 
												2:11; 1 Corinthians 2:14. The 
												book is delivered — Unsealed and 
												opened; to him that is unlearned 
												— and he saith, I cannot read 
												it; for I am unlearned. Thus, 
												neither the learned nor the 
												unlearned among the Jews were 
												any better for the messages 
												which God sent them by his 
												servants the prophets, nor 
												desired to be better.
 
 Verse 13-14
 Isaiah 29:13-14. Forasmuch as 
												this people draw near to me — 
												Namely, in acts of worship; with 
												their mouth — Speaking to me in 
												prayer and praise, and promising 
												and professing to serve me; and 
												with their lips do honour me — 
												With mere outward devotion and 
												bodily worship; but have removed 
												their heart far from me — Do not 
												render me that love and 
												gratitude, that regard and 
												obedience, which I require; and 
												their fear toward me is taught 
												by the precept of men — By mere 
												human wisdom, and not by my word 
												and Spirit. They worship and 
												serve me, not in such a manner 
												as I have prescribed, but 
												according to men’s inventions, 
												preferring the devices and 
												traditions of their false 
												prophets before my institutions. 
												Or, their religion is merely of 
												human, not of divine, origin: it 
												is the fruit of corrupt nature, 
												and not of renewing grace. I 
												will proceed to do a marvellous 
												work — A thing that will scarce 
												be believed; for the wisdom of 
												their wise men shall perish — 
												Shall disappear and vanish. A 
												veil shall be cast upon the eyes 
												of their minds, and their folly 
												shall be made manifest to all. 
												The most refined arts of their 
												politicians shall not avail 
												their authors, nor be able to 
												preserve them from God’s 
												judgments; and their most wise 
												and learned men shall lose their 
												usual discretion, and be 
												infatuated. This threatening was 
												remarkably fulfilled in the Jews 
												of our Lord’s time, who 
												crucified him out of fear of the 
												Romans, and thereby brought the 
												Romans upon them! And “their 
												learned rabbis, ever since, have 
												minded little else but fabulous 
												stories, and the Cabbalists have 
												vented trifles for profound 
												mysteries.” As, in rejecting 
												Christ and his gospel, they 
												removed their hearts far from 
												God, therefore God justly 
												removed wisdom far from them, 
												and hid from their eyes the 
												things that belonged even to 
												their temporal peace.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Isaiah 29:15-16. Wo unto them 
												that seek deep — Hebrew, 
												המעמיקים, that make, or dig 
												deep; a metaphor from persons 
												digging deep into the earth, 
												that they may hide what they 
												wish to keep safe and unknown. 
												To hide their counsel from the 
												Lord — Who vainly imagine that 
												they can conceal their hypocrisy 
												and secret wickedness from him, 
												and can deceive, not only men, 
												but God, by their external 
												professions and services; or, 
												who think they can carry on 
												their projects without the 
												observation or interposition of 
												Providence. And their works are 
												in the dark — Their wicked 
												counsels are contrived, and 
												their idolatry is practised, in 
												secret and dark places, of which 
												see Ezekiel 8:12. And they say, 
												Who seeth us? — Neither God nor 
												man can discover us. Surely your 
												turning of things upside down — 
												“Your giving things unexpected 
												turns, or false appearances, to 
												hide your true designs, shall 
												signify no more toward producing 
												the intended effect, than the 
												clay does without the 
												artificer.” Dr. Waterland 
												renders the verse, “This 
												perverseness of yours is as if 
												the potter were reputed as clay; 
												that the work should say of its 
												maker. He made me not; or the 
												thing framed, say of him that 
												framed it, He hath no 
												understanding.” Bishop Lowth 
												reads the passage in the 
												interrogative form, and thereby 
												gives it still more force: 
												“Perverse as ye are! shall the 
												potter be esteemed as the clay? 
												Shall the work say of the 
												workman, He hath not made me?” 
												&c. “We, and all our works are 
												in the hands of God, as clay in 
												the hands of the potter, to give 
												what form and fashion to them he 
												pleases; and when the finest 
												schemes are laid, he can work 
												things to a quite contrary end.” 
												— Lowth.
 
 Verse 17
 Isaiah 29:17. Is it not a very 
												little while, &c. — The 
												following paragraph, to the end 
												of the chapter, relates to the 
												times of the gospel; the prophet 
												foretelling therein, in 
												figurative language, the 
												rejection of the Jews and the 
												calling of the Gentiles. 
												Lebanon, a barren mountain, a 
												desolate wilderness, here stands 
												for the Gentile world. This was 
												to be turned into a fruitful 
												field — Hebrew, לכרמל, into 
												Carmel, or the vineyard of God, 
												as the word signifies. On the 
												other hand, the fruitful field, 
												what had formerly been the 
												vineyard of God, the Jewish 
												Church, should be esteemed as a 
												forest — See this interpretation 
												confirmed, Isaiah 32:15; and 
												Matthew 15:7-8.
 
 Verse 18-19
 Isaiah 29:18-19. In that day, 
												&c. — In these two verses we 
												have the first happy consequence 
												of Lebanon’s becoming a fruitful 
												field, “the spiritual blessings 
												of light and understanding in 
												divine things, and of joy and 
												consolation to be diffused among 
												the Gentiles, formerly deaf and 
												blind.” The deaf hear the words 
												of the book — That is, the 
												truths of divine revelation are 
												declared to the heathen, and 
												their ears are opened to hear, 
												and their hearts to understand 
												them. And the eyes of the blind 
												to see — They who had been for 
												ages in a state of the greatest 
												spiritual blindness and 
												darkness, shall be enlightened 
												with the clear and satisfactory 
												knowledge of God and his will. 
												The meek also — Humble and meek 
												believers of the Gentiles, 
												opposed to these proud and 
												scornful Jews, spoken of in the 
												former part of this, and in the 
												foregoing chapter; shall 
												increase their joy in the Lord — 
												Shall greatly rejoice in this, 
												that Jehovah is now their God 
												and portion. And the poor among 
												men — The poor in spirit, or the 
												poor of this world, to whom, 
												especially, the gospel has been 
												and is to be preached, or those 
												whom the Jews viewed as a mean 
												and despicable people; shall 
												rejoice in the Holy One of 
												Israel — Whom before they 
												neither knew nor regarded.
 
 Verse 20-21
 Isaiah 29:20-21. For, &c. — Here 
												we have the second event 
												connected with the calling of 
												the Gentiles, the punishment of 
												the enemies of God and his 
												truth. For the terrible one is 
												brought to naught — The proud 
												and potent enemies of those meek 
												and poor believers, mentioned in 
												the last verse, such as the 
												unbelieving Jews and their 
												rulers, and the heathen 
												potentates, were in the first 
												age of Christianity. And the 
												scorner is consumed — The 
												scornful opposers of God’s word 
												and servants. And all that watch 
												for iniquity — That early and 
												diligently apply themselves to 
												the practice of wickedness. That 
												make a man an offender for a 
												word — That condemn a man, as if 
												he were a great criminal, for a 
												verbal reproof; and lay a snare 
												for him that reproveth — For 
												God’s faithful prophets and 
												ministers, whose office it is to 
												reprove ungodly men; in the gate 
												— Where the people used to 
												assemble, both upon civil and 
												sacred accounts, and where 
												prophets used to deliver their 
												prophecies. And turn aside — 
												From his right; the just — 
												Hebrew, the just, or righteous 
												one, meaning chiefly the 
												prophets and ministers of God, 
												and especially Christ, often 
												called the Just One, both in the 
												Old and New Testaments; for a 
												thing of naught — Not for any 
												great advantage, but for a 
												trifle, which was a great 
												aggravation of their injustice, 
												or, with vanity, as 
												כתהוsignifies, that is, with 
												vain and frivolous pretences, or 
												without any colour of reason or 
												justice. Vitringa applies all 
												this to those who opposed Christ 
												and his apostles.
 
 Verses 22-24
 Isaiah 29:22-24. Therefore thus 
												saith the Lord — These verses 
												contain the third consequence of 
												turning Lebanon into a fruitful 
												field; “a wonderful increase of 
												the true seed of Abraham and 
												Jacob disseminated through the 
												whole world, in whom those 
												patriarchs, according to the 
												promises given them by God, 
												might be able to recognise their 
												true image.” Who redeemed 
												Abraham — From manifold dangers, 
												and especially from idolatry, in 
												which his family and ancestors 
												were generally involved; Jacob 
												shall not now be ashamed — The 
												posterity of Jacob, who had 
												great cause to be ashamed for 
												their continued infidelity, for 
												their persecutions of God’s 
												prophets and righteous servants, 
												and for their rejection of their 
												own Messiah, shall, at last, be 
												brought back unto the God of 
												their fathers, and to their own 
												Messiah. Neither shall his face 
												now wax pale — Through fear of 
												their enemies, who from time to 
												time had molested them, for now 
												they shall be delivered from 
												them all, and shall serve God 
												without fear, Luke 1:74. But 
												when he seeth his children — 
												When the believing seed of Jacob 
												shall see those children whom 
												they have begotten to God, by 
												the gospel, even the Gentiles; 
												the work of my hands — The 
												children, not of the flesh, but 
												of the promise, whom I, by my 
												almighty grace, have 
												regenerated; in the midst of him 
												— Incorporated with the Jews, 
												into one and the same body; they 
												shall sanctify my name, &c. — 
												Instead of despising and hating 
												the Gentiles, and envying them 
												the grace of God, they shall 
												praise and glorify God with 
												them, and for them. They also 
												that erred — Those Gentiles who 
												had erred from God’s truth, 
												being led aside by a lying 
												spirit to idolatry, and all 
												manner of impiety; shall come to 
												understanding — Shall come to 
												the knowledge of the truth; and 
												they that murmured, &c. — They 
												that would not receive the 
												doctrine of God, but murmured at 
												his faithful teachers who 
												delivered it; shall learn 
												doctrine — Shall receive God’s 
												truth in the love of it.
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