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												Verse 1Isaiah 49:1. Listen, O isles, 
												&c. — “Hitherto the subject of 
												the prophecy has been chiefly 
												confined to the redemption from 
												the captivity of Babylon, with 
												strong intimations of a more 
												important deliverance sometimes 
												thrown in; to the refutation of 
												idolatry, and the demonstration 
												of the infinite power, wisdom, 
												and foreknowledge of God. The 
												character and office of the 
												Messiah were exhibited in 
												general terms, at the beginning 
												of chap. 42., but here he is 
												introduced in person, declaring 
												the full extent of his 
												commission; which is not only to 
												restore the Israelites, and 
												reconcile them to their Lord and 
												Father, from whom they had so 
												often revolted, but to be a 
												light to lighten the Gentiles, 
												to call them to the knowledge 
												and obedience of the true God, 
												and to bring them to be one 
												church, together with the 
												Israelites, and to partake with 
												them of the same common 
												salvation procured for all, by 
												the great Redeemer and 
												Reconciler of man to God.” — 
												Bishop Lowth. By the isles here, 
												and the people from far, the 
												Gentiles are meant, who are 
												frequently addressed by the 
												appellation of isles, and who, 
												in general, lived in countries 
												far remote from Judea, now the 
												only place of God’s special 
												presence and worship. The person 
												who addresses them is the 
												Messiah, as evidently appears 
												from Isaiah 49:6, and several 
												other passages of this chapter. 
												If the character here exhibited 
												can, in any sense, as some think 
												it may, belong to the prophet, 
												“yet, in some parts,” as Bishop 
												Lowth justly observes, “it must 
												belong exclusively to Christ; 
												and in all parts to him in a 
												much fuller and more proper 
												sense.” God having, in the last 
												words of the preceding chapter, 
												intimated by his prophet, that 
												many of the Jews, 
												notwithstanding the glorious 
												deliverance from Babylon 
												vouchsafed them, would be 
												wicked, and foreknowing that he 
												would cast them off for their 
												wickedness, the Messiah here 
												addresses his speech to the 
												Gentiles, and invites them to 
												hearken to those counsels and 
												doctrines which he foresaw the 
												Jews would reject. The Lord hath 
												called me from the womb — This, 
												or the like expression, is used 
												of Jeremiah 1:5, and of Paul, 
												Galatians 1:15; but it was far 
												more eminently true of Christ, 
												who, as he was chosen to this 
												great office of redemption from 
												eternity, so he was separated 
												and called to it before he was 
												born, being both conceived and 
												sanctified by the Holy Ghost in 
												his mother’s womb, and sent into 
												the world upon this errand.
 
 Verse 2-3
 Isaiah 49:2-3. He hath made my 
												mouth like a sharp sword — As he 
												hath made me the great Teacher 
												of his church and of the world, 
												so he hath assisted me by his 
												Spirit, and made my word or 
												doctrine quick and powerful, and 
												sharper than any two-edged 
												sword, killing men’s lusts, 
												convincing, humbling, and 
												converting their souls, and 
												mighty to pull down strong 
												holds, and every high thing that 
												exalteth itself against the 
												knowledge of God, 2 Corinthians 
												10:4-5. In the shadow of his 
												hand hath he hid me — He will 
												protect me by his power from all 
												mine enemies, until I have 
												finished the work for which he 
												sent me. And made me a polished 
												shaft — Like an arrow, whose 
												point is bright and polished, 
												and therefore pierces deeper. 
												And said, Thou art my servant, O 
												Israel — The person who is here 
												called Israel, cannot, in any 
												sense, be Isaiah. But, as the 
												name of David is sometimes given 
												to his successors, and 
												particularly to Christ, Jeremiah 
												30:9; Ezekiel 34:23; Hosea 3:5, 
												and the name of Isaac is given 
												to his posterity, Amos 7:9; so 
												here the name of Israel may not 
												unfitly be given to Christ, not 
												only because he descended from 
												his loins, but also, because he 
												was the true and the great 
												Israel, who, in a more eminent 
												manner, prevailed with God, as 
												that name signifies; of whom 
												Jacob, who was first called 
												Israel, was but a type. And as 
												the name of Christ, the head, is 
												sometimes given to his body, the 
												church, as 1 Corinthians 12:12, 
												so it is not strange if, on the 
												contrary, the name of Israel, 
												which properly belongs to the 
												church, be given to Christ, the 
												head of it. The words, however, 
												may be rendered, Thou art my 
												servant, unto, in, or for 
												Israel, that is, to bring them 
												back unto me, from whom they 
												have revolted; or Israel is he 
												in whom I will be glorified by 
												thee.
 
 Verse 4
 Isaiah 49:4. Then I said — By 
												way of objection; I have 
												laboured in vain — Lord, thou 
												sayest thou wilt be glorified by 
												my ministry; but I find it 
												otherwise. I have spent my 
												strength for naught — Without 
												any considerable fruit of my 
												word and works. “The words,” 
												says Vitringa, “contain the 
												complaint of the Son of God, 
												concerning the small fruit of 
												his mission to the Jews, and the 
												small hope of establishing and 
												successfully propagating his 
												kingdom among them; like that 
												which is attributed to the same 
												great Teacher and his apostles, 
												Isaiah 53:1. But at the same 
												time he supports himself with 
												the hope, that he should obtain 
												a glorious and abundant fruit of 
												his divine mission in the world; 
												for that his judgment, or right, 
												was with God, and the reward of 
												his work laid up with him; who 
												would take good care, according 
												to his wisdom and justice, that 
												the proper and full recompense 
												of his labour should be paid 
												him.” According to this just 
												exposition of the passage, the 
												latter clause of the verse 
												agrees with the former, and the 
												sense of both is briefly this: 
												Though I see little or no fruit 
												of my labour among the Jews, and 
												meet with nothing but contempt, 
												and reproach, and ill usage from 
												them; yet God sees my fidelity 
												and diligence in my work, and he 
												will give judgment for me, and 
												amply reward me in due time.
 
 Verse 5-6
 Isaiah 49:5-6. And now, saith 
												the Lord — These are the words 
												of the Father, addressing his 
												Son, now become incarnate for 
												the redemption of mankind; that 
												formed me from the womb — This 
												refers to the human nature of 
												Christ formed in the womb of the 
												Virgin by the Holy Ghost; to 
												bring Jacob again to him — To 
												convert the wicked and apostate 
												Israelites. Though Israel be not 
												gathered — Be not brought to God 
												by my ministry: or, according to 
												the reading of the margin, that 
												Israel may be gathered to him, 
												and I may be glorious, &c. The 
												word יאסŠ, be gathered, implies 
												that the Israelites were 
												scattered from God, and divided 
												among themselves, as they were, 
												in a high degree, when Christ 
												came into the world, having, as 
												is said Isaiah 53:6, turned 
												every one to his own way, and 
												therefore they needed to be 
												gathered. It seems to be a 
												metaphor taken from wandering 
												sheep, which the good shepherd 
												diligently seeks and brings home 
												to the fold. Yet shall I be 
												glorious in the eyes of the Lord 
												— According to this reading, 
												preferred by our translators, 
												the sense is, Though Israel, 
												God’s own, and, at present, his 
												only people, reject me, which 
												will be a cause of great wonder 
												and scandal, yet God will not 
												despise me for the 
												unsuccessfulness of my labours 
												among them, but will honour and 
												glorify me, both with himself 
												and in the face of the world, in 
												crowning my endeavours with 
												glorious success among other 
												people. And my God shall be my 
												strength — To support me under 
												this and all other 
												discouragements and difficulties 
												in the discharge of my office. 
												And he — The Lord; said, It is a 
												light thing — A small matter in 
												comparison of what follows; that 
												thou shouldest raise up the 
												tribes of Jacob — That remnant 
												of them which shall survive all 
												their calamities and 
												desolations. I will also give 
												thee for a light to the Gentiles 
												— I will make thy labour 
												effectual for the illumination, 
												conversion, and salvation of the 
												Gentiles in all parts of the 
												world. This could not be said of 
												Isaiah with any colour of truth, 
												and therefore must be understood 
												of Christ, by whom it was 
												literally and fully 
												accomplished. The words, That 
												thou mayest be my salvation, 
												mean, that the Messiah should be 
												the revealer, procurer, and 
												giver of eternal salvation to 
												the believing Gentiles.
 
 Verse 7
 Isaiah 49:7. To him whom man 
												despiseth — To Christ, to whom, 
												in the days of his flesh, this 
												description most truly and fully 
												agreed, being the same in effect 
												with that Isaiah 53:3, for men, 
												both Jews and Gentiles, among 
												whom he lived, did despise him 
												from their hearts; and the 
												nation, of which he was a 
												member, abhorred both his person 
												and his doctrine; and he was so 
												far from being a temporal 
												monarch that he came in the form 
												of a servant, and was a servant 
												of rulers, professing 
												subjection, and paying tribute 
												unto Cesar, and being treated by 
												the rulers, both of the Jews and 
												Romans, like a servant, being 
												despitefully used and crucified, 
												which was then a kind of 
												punishment inflicted only on 
												slaves or servants. Kings shall 
												see — Though for a time thou 
												shalt be despised, yet after a 
												while thou shalt be advanced to 
												such glory, that kings shall 
												look upon thee with reverence: 
												and arise — From their seats to 
												worship thee. Because the Lord 
												that is faithful — Because God 
												shall make good his promises to 
												thee. And he shall choose thee — 
												And although thou shalt be 
												rejected by thine own people, 
												yet God will manifest to the 
												world that thou, and thou only, 
												art the person whom he hath 
												chosen to be the Redeemer of 
												mankind. The words imply the 
												wonderful progress of the gospel 
												from small beginnings; and show 
												that the Author of it, from 
												being the contempt of the great 
												men of the world, should come to 
												be the object of their 
												adoration.
 
 Verse 8
 Isaiah 49:8. Thus saith the Lord 
												— God the Father unto Christ; In 
												an acceptable time — Hebrew, 
												רצון בעת, in the season of 
												acceptance, as Bishop Lowth 
												renders it, or, in a time of 
												good-will, according to others: 
												in that time when God shall, in 
												a special manner, manifest his 
												good-will to the sons of men; in 
												the day of his grace and man’s 
												salvation, that is, in the time 
												of the gospel, which was, and 
												is, the time of God’s peculiar 
												good-will toward men, Luke 2:14. 
												In the days of thy flesh, when 
												thou shalt offer up prayers and 
												supplications, with strong 
												crying and tears, Hebrews 5:7; 
												have I heard — Or, will I hear, 
												thee — Though not so as to 
												deliver thee from death, yet so 
												as to support thee under thy 
												sufferings, to give a blessed 
												success to thy labours, and to 
												crown thee with glory and 
												honour. And in a day of 
												salvation — In the time which I 
												have appointed for the effecting 
												man’s redemption; have I helped 
												— Or, will I help, thee — 
												Namely, upon earth, till thy 
												work be finished; and preserve 
												thee — Unto that eternal kingdom 
												and glory which is prepared for 
												thee. And give thee for a 
												covenant of the people — To be 
												the Mediator and Surety of that 
												covenant which is made between 
												me and all my people, that is, 
												all penitent and believing 
												persons, whether Jews or 
												Gentiles. To establish the earth 
												— To settle the church upon firm 
												foundations, and compose the 
												great differences in the world 
												between God and man, Jews and 
												Gentiles, Ephesians 2:13-16; as 
												also to establish truth and 
												righteousness upon earth, and 
												subdue those lusts and passions 
												which are the great disturbers 
												of human society: to do which 
												things was the great design of 
												God in sending his Son into the 
												world. To cause to inherit 
												desolate heritages — That 
												desolate places may be repaired 
												and possessed: or to bring the 
												heathen, who are in a desolate 
												and forlorn condition, to be 
												Christ’s inheritance, according 
												to Psalms 2:8.
 
 Verses 9-11
 Isaiah 49:9-11. That thou mayest 
												say — Namely, with power and 
												effect, as when God said, Let 
												there be light; to the prisoners 
												— To the Gentiles, who are fast 
												bound by the cords of their 
												sins, and taken captive by the 
												devil at his will. Go forth — 
												Come forth to the light, receive 
												divine illumination. They shall 
												feed, &c. — They shall have 
												abundant provision in all 
												places, yea, even in those which 
												commonly are unfruitful, as are 
												both common roads and high 
												grounds. They shall not hunger, 
												&c. — They shall be supplied 
												with all good and necessary 
												things, and preserved from all 
												evil occurrences and annoyances, 
												as the Israelites were in the 
												wilderness, by the manna and 
												other provision afforded them, 
												and the pillar of the cloud and 
												fire, a token of the divine 
												presence and protection. For he 
												that hath mercy on them shall 
												lead them — God, who hath 
												magnified his mercy to them, 
												will conduct them with safety 
												and comfort. And I will make all 
												mountains a way — I will remove 
												all hinderances, and prepare the 
												way for them, by levelling high 
												grounds, and raising the low.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Isaiah 49:12-13. Behold, these 
												shall come from far — My people 
												shall be gathered from the most 
												remote parts of the earth. He 
												speaks here, and in many other 
												places, of the conversion of the 
												Gentiles, with allusion to that 
												work of gathering and bringing 
												back the Jews from all parts 
												where they were dispersed, into 
												their own land. And these from 
												the land of Sinim — Either of 
												the Sinites, as they are called, 
												Genesis 10:17, who dwelt about 
												the wilderness; or of Sin, a 
												famous city of Egypt, which may 
												be put for all Egypt, and that 
												for all southern parts. And so 
												he here mentions the several 
												quarters of the world where the 
												generality of the Jews were 
												dispersed; the north, which is 
												everywhere named as the chief 
												place of their banishment and 
												dispersion, as Jeremiah 16:15; 
												and Jeremiah 31:8, and 
												elsewhere; the west, the western 
												countries and islands; and the 
												south. Sing, O heavens, &c. — 
												See note on Isaiah 44:23. For 
												the Lord hath comforted his 
												people — God hath now sent the 
												long-desired consolation of 
												Israel.
 
 Verse 14
 Isaiah 49:14. But Zion said, &c. 
												— This is an objection against 
												all these glorious predictions 
												and promises. How can these 
												things be true when the 
												condition of God’s church is now 
												so sad and desperate? Most 
												commentators understand by Zion 
												here, the Jewish Church, and 
												suppose that the complaint which 
												she is here represented as 
												uttering, refers either to her 
												desolate state when in Babylon, 
												or to the time of her long 
												dispersion and desolation in the 
												days of the Messiah. But 
												Vitringa is of opinion that the 
												Christian Church is rather 
												intended, and that the time 
												referred to is that of her cruel 
												persecution under the Romans. Be 
												it which it may, God here 
												declares that he will show her 
												mercy, and destroy her mighty 
												oppressors, Isaiah 49:24-26.
 
 Verse 15-16
 Isaiah 49:15-16. Can a woman 
												forget her sucking child — God 
												is often represented as bearing 
												a fatherly affection toward his 
												people, but here the comparison 
												is raised higher, and he speaks 
												of himself as having a 
												tenderness for them, similar to 
												that which a mother hath toward 
												the fruit of her womb. “The 
												image is common and frequent; 
												yet it is wrought up with so 
												much grace, embellished with so 
												much elegance, and expressed in 
												such pathetic terms, that 
												nothing can exceed it in beauty 
												and force; nothing can convey a 
												stronger idea of the maternal, 
												the more than maternal regard, 
												which God hath for his people.” 
												Yea, they may forget, yet will I 
												not forget thee — The turn in 
												this clause is more expressive 
												than a volume. As if he had 
												said, Earthly parents sometimes 
												are so unnatural and monstrous; 
												but do not entertain such 
												unworthy thoughts of me. Behold, 
												I have graven thee upon the 
												palms, &c. — Mine eye and heart 
												are constantly upon thee. “This 
												is certainly an allusion,” says 
												Bishop Lowth, “to some practice, 
												common among the Jews at that 
												time, of making marks on their 
												hands or arms by punctures on 
												the skin, rendered indelible by 
												fire or staining, with some sort 
												of sign, or representation of 
												the city or temple, to show 
												their affection and zeal for it. 
												It is well known that the 
												pilgrims at the holy sepulchre 
												get themselves marked in this 
												manner with what are called the 
												ensigns of Jerusalem. Maundrell, 
												p. 75; where he tells us how it 
												is performed: and this art is 
												practised by travelling Jews all 
												over the world at this day.” See 
												also Vitringa and Michaelis’s 
												notes. Or the allusion may be 
												merely to the common practice of 
												men, who use to put signs upon 
												their hands or fingers, of such 
												things as they especially wish 
												to remember. Thy walls are 
												continually before me — The 
												ruins and desolations of my 
												church are always in my 
												thoughts, nor shall I forget or 
												neglect to repair them, and 
												grant her deliverance from her 
												enemies, and protection at the 
												proper time.
 
 Verse 17
 Isaiah 49:17. Thy children — Or, 
												as some, with equal propriety, 
												render בנין, thy builders; which 
												rendering is favoured by the 
												next clause, where the 
												destroyers are opposed to them, 
												but the following verse favours 
												the former interpretation: the 
												sense, however, is the same, for 
												the church’s children are her 
												builders; shall make haste — To 
												repair thy ruins and 
												desolations, and build thee up. 
												Thy destroyers, &c., shall go 
												forth of thee — Shall be 
												separated and driven from thee, 
												and so shall neither hinder nor 
												annoy thee. But this rendering, 
												shall go forth of thee, says 
												Bishop Lowth, “is very flat, 
												after their zeal had been 
												expressed by their being her 
												builders: and as the opposition 
												is kept up in one part of the 
												sentence, one has reason to 
												expect it in the other.” He, 
												therefore, renders ממן יצאו, 
												shall proceed, spring, or issue, 
												from thee; namely, as thy 
												children, and reads the whole 
												verse thus: They that destroy 
												thee shall soon become thy 
												builders; and they that laid 
												thee waste shall become thine 
												offspring: the accession of the 
												Gentiles to the church of God 
												being properly considered as an 
												addition made to the number of 
												the family and children of Zion.
 
 Verse 18
 Isaiah 49:18. Lift up thine eyes 
												round about — And behold numbers 
												flocking unto thee from all 
												quarters. All these shall gather 
												themselves unto thee, &c. — 
												Namely, the Gentiles. Thy 
												church, O Zion, shall not only 
												be restored and established, but 
												vastly enlarged and adorned by 
												an accession of converts from 
												various nations; and come unto 
												thee — To receive instruction 
												from thee, and to be 
												incorporated with thee into one 
												and the same church. Thou shalt 
												clothe thee with them, &c. — 
												Instead of being a disgrace, or 
												a snare and occasion of sin to 
												thee, (as the Gentiles formerly 
												were, when they mixed themselves 
												with the Jews,) they shall be an 
												honour and ornament, in respect 
												of those excellent gifts and 
												graces wherewith they shall 
												enrich and adorn thy community. 
												The addition of such numbers to 
												the church shall complete her 
												clothing, and make her appear 
												comely and considerable. And 
												bind them on thee as a bride 
												doth — The LXX. read, περιθησεις 
												αυτους ως κοσμον νυμφη, Thou 
												shalt put them on thee as a 
												bride her attire; supplying, as 
												Bishop Lowth thinks, a word that 
												appears to be wanting to 
												complete the sense. “Zion 
												clothes herself with her 
												children as a bride clothes 
												herself — with what? with some 
												other thing, certainly;” namely, 
												her ornaments, jewels, or rich 
												dress.
 
 Verses 19-21
 Isaiah 49:19-21. For thy waste 
												and desolate places, &c. — He 
												alludes to the land of Judea 
												lying waste during the 
												Babylonish captivity. Thus the 
												church of God was in a waste, 
												desolate, and barren state, till 
												the coming of the Messiah, the 
												introduction of the gospel, and 
												the conversion of the Gentiles; 
												and the land of thy destruction 
												— Or, thy land of destruction. 
												He still alludes to Judea, thus 
												characterized, because it was 
												devoted, and should be exposed 
												to destruction, first by the 
												Chaldeans, and again by the 
												Romans, a lively emblem of the 
												ruined state of their church; 
												shall even now be too narrow — 
												To contain the multitude of 
												converts that shall be made. The 
												middle wall of partition that 
												separated the Jews from the 
												Gentiles shall be broken down, 
												and the pale of the church shall 
												be enlarged. The children which 
												thou shalt have, &c. — Hebrew, 
												בני שׁכלין, The children of thy 
												orbity, or, barren and childless 
												state. Those children which thou 
												shalt have when thou art past 
												the ordinary age and state of 
												childbearing, as Sarah in her 
												old age was made the mother of a 
												most numerous posterity; to 
												which he seems to allude: those 
												children which shall be begotten 
												to thee by the gospel when thou 
												shalt be deprived of thine own 
												natural children, or when thou 
												shalt become barren as to the 
												conversion of natural Jews; when 
												the generality of the Jews shall 
												cut themselves off from God and 
												his true church, by their 
												apostacy from him, and by their 
												unbelief and rejection of their 
												Messiah; shall say again — Or 
												rather, shall yet say, though 
												for the present it be far 
												otherwise, The place is too 
												strait for me, &c. — This is 
												figuratively spoken, merely to 
												signify the great enlargement of 
												the church by the accession of 
												the Gentiles. See Isaiah 54:1. 
												Then shalt thou say in thy heart 
												— Not without admiration, Who 
												hath begotten me these — Whence, 
												or by whom, have I this numerous 
												issue? Seeing I have lost my 
												children — Seeing it is not long 
												since that I was in a manner 
												childless? And am desolate — 
												Without a husband, being 
												forsaken of God, who formerly 
												owned himself for my husband, 
												Isaiah 54:5; Jeremiah 31:32; a 
												captive, and removing to and fro 
												— In an unsettled condition, and 
												not likely to bear and bring up 
												children for God or myself. Who 
												hath brought up these? — The 
												same thing is repeated in these 
												words to express the 
												miraculousness of this work, and 
												the great surprise of the Jews 
												at it: which shows that he 
												speaks of the conversion of the 
												Gentiles.
 
 Verse 22-23
 Isaiah 49:22-23. I will lift up 
												my hand to the Gentiles — I will 
												call them to me; and set up my 
												standard to the people — As 
												generals do, to gather their 
												forces together. And they shall 
												bring thy sons — Those who shall 
												be thine by adoption, who shall 
												own God for their Father, and 
												Jerusalem for their mother; in 
												their arms — With great care and 
												tenderness, as nurses carry 
												young infants: the sense is, 
												Even the heathen shall 
												contribute to the increase and 
												preservation of those children 
												which shall be begotten to thee. 
												And thy daughters shall be 
												carried, &c. — As sick or infirm 
												persons used to be carried. And 
												kings shall be thy nursing 
												fathers — Kings and queens shall 
												have a sincere affection and 
												tender regard unto thee and thy 
												children. Which was in some sort 
												fulfilled by Cyrus, Ahasuerus, 
												and some few others of the 
												Persian kings or queens; but 
												much more truly and fully by 
												those many kings and emperors of 
												the Gentile world who, after the 
												time of Christ, did both 
												themselves embrace the true 
												religion, and also provide for 
												the reception and establishment 
												of it in their dominions. They 
												shall bow down to thee, &c. — 
												They shall highly reverence and 
												honour thee, and shall most 
												humbly and readily submit 
												themselves unto thee. This was 
												not verified in any of the 
												Persian kings, but only in those 
												kings or emperors who were 
												converted to the Christian faith 
												and church. And lick up the dust 
												of thy feet — These expressions 
												are borrowed from the manners of 
												the eastern people in their 
												prostrations and adorations, who 
												bowed so low as to touch and 
												kiss the ground. For they shall 
												not be ashamed that wait for me 
												— Their expectations shall not 
												be disappointed, but abundantly 
												satisfied.
 
 Verses 24-26
 Isaiah 49:24-26. Shall the prey 
												be taken from the mighty — Here 
												an objection is started against 
												the forementioned promises, 
												probably, 1st, Against the 
												promise of the release of the 
												Jews from their captivity in 
												Babylon, suggesting that it was 
												a thing not to be expected: for, 
												Isaiah 49:24, they were a prey 
												in the hands of the mighty, of 
												such as were then the greatest 
												potentates of the earth; and, 
												therefore, it was not likely 
												they should be rescued by force; 
												yet that was not all, they were 
												lawful captives. By the law of 
												God, having offended, they were 
												justly delivered into captivity. 
												And by the law of nations, being 
												taken in war, they were justly 
												detained in captivity till they 
												should be ransomed or exchanged. 
												So here was a double, or rather, 
												treble impediment to their 
												deliverance; the great power of 
												the enemy, which kept them in 
												bondage, and the justice of God, 
												and the usage of nations, which 
												pleaded against them. And yet 
												their deliverance, however 
												improbable, was effected by the 
												mercy and power of God. But this 
												passage, as appears from the 
												context, has a further 
												reference: it respects the 
												deliverance of God’s church and 
												people from their spiritual as 
												well as temporal enemies. “God 
												had promised very great and 
												excellent things to his church; 
												but to a person seriously 
												considering the state thereof, 
												and comparing it with the power 
												of his enemies, and particularly 
												its chief enemy, Satan, who held 
												the nations in the darkness of 
												ignorance and superstition, a 
												doubt would naturally arise, 
												whether it could possibly be 
												that this prey, so long 
												possessed by Satan, could be 
												rescued from him, so that he 
												might be driven from his strong 
												fort, and the rulers of the 
												world, held in subjection by 
												him, might be delivered from 
												their servitude. Isaiah resolves 
												this doubt of the church, and 
												teaches that it should certainly 
												come to pass that Satan, this 
												mighty one, should be driven 
												from his fort, his captives 
												delivered, (Isaiah 49:25,) and 
												the adversaries of the church 
												perish by their mutual slaughter 
												of each other.” Thus Vitringa, 
												who observes that Isaiah 49:26, 
												I will feed them that oppress 
												thee with their own flesh, &c., 
												is to be “understood 
												metaphorically, and refers to 
												the intestine wars, by which 
												princes and people, armed to 
												their mutual destruction, plunge 
												their destroying swords in each 
												other’s bowels, and, as it were, 
												feed upon each other’s flesh and 
												blood.” See Isaiah 9:20; 
												Zechariah 11:9; Revelation 16:6. 
												They shall be drunken with their 
												own blood as with new wine — I 
												will make thine enemies destroy 
												one another, and that greedily, 
												and with delight. This prophecy 
												was remarkably fulfilled in the 
												time of the Roman emperor, 
												Dioclesian, to which it is 
												thought by some particularly to 
												refer.
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