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												Verse 1Isaiah 54:1. Sing, O barren — 
												The prophet, having largely 
												discoursed of the sufferings of 
												Christ, and of the blessed 
												fruits thereof, among which one 
												particularly promised was, that 
												he should have a numerous seed 
												that should believe on him; and 
												here, foreseeing the 
												accomplishment of this glorious 
												promise, he breaks forth into 
												this song of triumph, addressing 
												his speech to the church, or 
												spouse of God, or Christ, as is 
												manifest from the following 
												words, and especially from 
												Isaiah 54:5, and from Galatians 
												4:27, where it is so expounded. 
												Some, indeed, understand this 
												chapter of the flourishing 
												condition of the Jewish Church 
												and state after their return 
												from Babylon; but the 
												magnificent promises here 
												following do so vastly exceed 
												their condition at that time, 
												that it must necessarily be 
												referred to the times of the 
												gospel, in which all that is 
												here said was, or will be, 
												remarkably fulfilled. And 
												therefore, as the foregoing 
												chapter directly and literally 
												speaks of Christ: so doth this 
												of the church of Christ, or of 
												the kingdom of the Messiah, of 
												whom the ancient Hebrew doctors 
												understood it. Now this church, 
												consisting at first of the Jews, 
												and afterward of the Gentiles, 
												incorporated with them into the 
												same body, he calls barren, 
												because she had been so, 
												comparatively speaking, before 
												and until the coming of Christ; 
												few sincere converts having been 
												brought forth to God by her 
												ministry, either of Jewish or 
												Gentile race. For more are the 
												children of the desolate, &c. — 
												The Gentile world, or the church 
												of the Gentiles, which in the 
												times of the Old Testament was 
												desolate, having neither husband 
												nor children, doth now, under 
												the gospel, bring forth unto God 
												a far more numerous progeny than 
												the church of the Jews, which 
												had been married to God for many 
												ages, until, by her apostacy 
												from him, and from her Messiah, 
												she provoked him to put her 
												away.
 
 Verse 2-3
 Isaiah 54:2-3. Enlarge the place 
												of thy tent — That it may be 
												capable of receiving the 
												Gentiles, who shall flock to 
												thee in great numbers, and 
												desire to associate themselves 
												with thee. And let them — Those 
												to whom that work belongs; 
												stretch forth the curtains, &c. 
												— The meaning is, the curtains 
												must and shall be stretched out. 
												Spare not — Fear not lest thou 
												shouldest prepare more room than 
												will be occupied; for very large 
												accessions are to be expected. 
												And strengthen thy stakes — That 
												they may be able to support the 
												great weight which the tent, 
												thus enlarged, shall be upon 
												them. For thou shalt break 
												forth, &c. — Thou shalt bring 
												forth a multitude of children; 
												for the word פרצ, here rendered 
												break forth, is commonly used of 
												any great and extraordinary 
												propagation of living creatures, 
												whether beasts or men; on the 
												right hand and on the left — On 
												every side, in all parts of the 
												world. Or, thy children shall be 
												so numerous that they can no 
												longer be contained within 
												narrow bounds. And thy seed — 
												Thy spiritual seed, the members 
												of the New Testament church, and 
												especially the apostles and 
												other ministers of Christ; shall 
												inherit the Gentiles — Shall 
												bring the Gentile world to the 
												obedience of the faith; and make 
												the desolate cities to be 
												inhabited — Shall cause those 
												cities and countries which, in a 
												spiritual sense, were desolate, 
												being destitute of all good, to 
												be filled with members of the 
												church.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Isaiah 54:4-5. Thou shalt not be 
												ashamed — As formerly, of the 
												straitness of thy borders, and 
												the fewness of thy children. 
												Thou shalt forget the reproach 
												of thy youth — Thy barrenness in 
												former times: so great shall be 
												thy fertility and felicity, that 
												it shall cause thee to forget 
												thy former unfruitfulness and 
												misery. And shalt not remember 
												the reproach of thy widowhood — 
												That time and state when thou 
												wast like a widow, disconsolate 
												and desolate, deprived or 
												forsaken of her husband, and 
												having few or no children. For 
												thy Maker — He who made thee out 
												of nothing, and therefore can 
												fulfil all these promises, how 
												improbable soever their 
												fulfilment may appear; is thy 
												husband — Will own thee for his 
												spouse, and give thee proof of 
												his conjugal affection. The Lord 
												of hosts — Who hath the 
												sovereign command of all men and 
												creatures, and therefore can 
												subdue the Gentiles to thee, and 
												can make thee to increase and 
												multiply in so prodigious a 
												measure, even in thy old age, 
												notwithstanding thy barrenness 
												in the days of thy youth, of 
												which he speaks in the foregoing 
												verse. The God of the whole 
												earth shall he be called — The 
												God and Father of all nations. 
												Whereas formerly he was called 
												the God of Israel only, and the 
												Gentiles had no special relation 
												to him, the time is now coming 
												when he shall be called the God 
												of the Gentiles also, having 
												admitted them into the same 
												covenant relation to himself 
												with the Jews, and the partition 
												wall between Jews and Gentiles 
												being broken down. See Zechariah 
												14:9; Romans 3:29; Ephesians 
												2:11-16.
 
 Verses 6-8
 Isaiah 54:6-8. For the Lord hath 
												called thee — To return and come 
												again to him; as a woman 
												forsaken — When thou wast like a 
												woman forsaken by her husband, 
												who had given her a bill of 
												divorce; and grieved in spirit — 
												For the loss of her husband’s 
												favour and society, and for the 
												reproach attending it; and a 
												wife of youth — As 
												affectionately as a husband 
												recalleth his wife whom he 
												married in her and his own 
												youth, whom, though he might on 
												some provocation put away, yet 
												he soon repents of doing it, and 
												his affection for her reviving, 
												he invites her to return to him; 
												when thou wast refused — Though 
												for a time thou wast refused and 
												rejected by him; saith thy God — 
												Jehovah, who will again show 
												himself to be thy God, and will 
												renew his covenant with thee. 
												For a small moment — For the 
												space of some few years, as 
												seventy years in Babylon, and 
												some such intervals, which may 
												well be called a small moment, 
												in comparison of God’s 
												everlasting kindness, mentioned 
												in the next verse: have I 
												forsaken thee — Withdrawn my 
												favour and help from thee, and 
												left thee in thine enemies’ 
												hands. But with great mercies — 
												Such as are very precious, and 
												of long continuance; will I 
												gather thee — From all the 
												places where thou art dispersed, 
												from all parts of the world. In 
												a little wrath I hid my face 
												from thee — I removed the means 
												and pledges of my presence and 
												kindness; but with everlasting 
												kindness will I have mercy, &c. 
												— With kindness to thee, and thy 
												seed, through all succeeding 
												generations, in time, and to all 
												eternity.
 
 
 Verse 9-10
 Isaiah 54:9-10. For this is as 
												the waters of Noah — This 
												covenant of grace and peace made 
												with thee shall be as certain 
												and perpetual as that which I 
												made with Noah, that there 
												should never be another flood of 
												waters to drown the world. So 
												have I sworn that I would not be 
												wroth with thee — Namely, so as 
												I have been, or so as to forsake 
												thee utterly. For the mountains 
												shall depart, &c. — The 
												mountains and hills shall sooner 
												depart from their places than my 
												kindness shall depart from thee. 
												Nay, the time will come when all 
												the mountains shall depart, and 
												all the hills be removed, and 
												even the whole earth, and all 
												the works that are therein, 
												shall be burned up, but then the 
												covenant of peace between God 
												and his church shall continue in 
												the everlasting happiness of all 
												the true and spiritual members 
												of it. God will not cast off the 
												Christian Church, as he cast off 
												the Church of the Jews; the new 
												covenant being established upon 
												better and surer promises than 
												the old; see Hebrews 8:6-7. 
												Saith the Lord that hath mercy 
												on thee — Who acts thus toward 
												thee, not for thy merits, but 
												through his own grace and mercy.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Isaiah 54:11-12. O thou 
												afflicted, &c. — O thou, my 
												church, which hast been in a 
												most afflicted and comfortless 
												condition; behold, I will lay 
												thy stones with fair colours, 
												&c. — I will make thee 
												exceedingly beautiful and pure, 
												stable and glorious. For, as 
												Bishop Lowth justly observes, 
												“these seem to be general images 
												to express beauty, magnificence, 
												purity, strength, and solidity, 
												agreeably to the ideas of the 
												eastern nations; and to have 
												never been intended to be 
												strictly scrutinized, or 
												minutely and particularly 
												explained, as if they had each 
												of them some precise moral or 
												spiritual meaning. Tobit, in his 
												prophecy of the final 
												restoration of Israel, (Tobit 
												13:16-17,) describes the New 
												Jerusalem in the same oriental 
												manner. ‘For Jerusalem shall be 
												built up with sapphires, and 
												emeralds, and precious stones; 
												thy walls, and towers, and 
												battlements, with pure gold; and 
												the streets of Jerusalem shall 
												be paved with beryl, and 
												carbuncle, and stones of 
												Ophir.’” It must be well 
												observed, however, that it is 
												not any external pomp or worldly 
												glory that is intended to be set 
												forth in these verses, as is 
												evident from many parts of 
												Scripture, which assure us that 
												Christ’s kingdom is of another 
												nature, and that the outward 
												condition of God’s church is, 
												and, for the most part, will be, 
												mean and afflicted in this 
												world: but it is of a spiritual 
												beauty and glory that these 
												things are spoken, consisting in 
												a plentiful effusion of 
												excellent gifts, graces, and 
												comforts upon the church, which, 
												however, will be followed with 
												eternal glory in heaven. We have 
												a similar description of the 
												church’s glory Revelation 21:11, 
												&c. I will make thy windows of 
												agates — Hebrew, כדכד, “lapis 
												pretiosus quasi scintillans 
												dictus,” says Buxtorf; a 
												precious stone, so called from 
												its sparkling. One kind of these 
												stones, according to Pliny, was 
												transparent like glass. But some 
												render the word crystal; and the 
												LXX., and some others of the 
												ancients, translate it jasper. 
												The truth is, the proper 
												signification of the Hebrew 
												names of precious stones is not 
												perfectly known to the Jews 
												themselves. It may suffice us to 
												know that this was some very 
												clear, transparent, and probably 
												sparkling precious stone. And 
												all thy borders — The utmost 
												parts or walls, of pleasant 
												stones. The church is here 
												evidently compared to a 
												building, whose foundation, 
												pavement, gates, and windows are 
												all named.
 
 Verse 13-14
 Isaiah 54:13-14. All thy 
												children shall be taught of the 
												Lord — The church’s children, 
												being born of God, shall be 
												taught of God, and that not only 
												outwardly, by his word, but 
												inwardly, by his Spirit. Our 
												Lord, who quotes this passage, 
												John 6:45, applies it to gospel 
												grace, and represents it as 
												having its accomplishment in all 
												those that are brought savingly 
												to believe in him. And great 
												shall be the peace of thy 
												children —
 
 1st, Inward peace, arising from 
												clear discoveries of God’s love, 
												and his reconciliation to us, 
												and wrought by the Spirit of 
												adoption, which is more 
												abundantly given to believers 
												under the gospel than under the 
												law. 2d, Outward peace, safety, 
												and happiness, which is more 
												fully promised in the following 
												verses, and which God, when he 
												sees fit, will confer upon his 
												church. In righteousness shalt 
												thou be established — This 
												kingdom shall be set up and 
												established, not by injustice, 
												fraud, or tyranny, as other 
												kingdoms frequently are, but 
												upon a righteous foundation, and 
												by the exercise of righteousness 
												and holiness, which is the glory 
												and felicity of any society. 
												Thou shalt be far from 
												oppression — Either by thine own 
												governors, or by foreign powers. 
												Those that have oppressed thee 
												shall be removed; those that 
												would oppress thee shall be 
												restrained; and therefore thou 
												shalt not fear — Thou shalt 
												neither have any just cause of 
												fear, nor be given up to the 
												torment of fear without cause.
 
 Verses 15-17
 Isaiah 54:15-17. Behold, they 
												shall gather together — It is 
												true, some will combine, and 
												make an attempt against thee. 
												But not by me — As they will do 
												this without any such commission 
												from me as Sennacherib and 
												Nebuchadnezzar had, so they 
												shall not have my help in it, 
												without which all their 
												endeavours will be in vain. 
												Whosoever shall gather together 
												— To fight against, or persecute 
												thee; shall fall for thy sake — 
												Through that respect and love 
												which I bear to thee. Or, before 
												thee, as the Hebrew may be 
												rendered, so as thine eyes shall 
												behold it.
 
 Behold, I have created the 
												smith, &c. — Both the smith that 
												makes warlike instruments, and 
												the soldier that uses them, are 
												my creatures, and totally at my 
												command, and therefore they 
												cannot hurt you without my 
												leave. I have created the 
												waster, &c. — To destroy only 
												whom and when I please. No 
												weapon formed against thee shall 
												prosper — As they cannot do any 
												thing against thee without my 
												leave, so I assure thee I will 
												not suffer them really to injure 
												thee; and every tongue, &c., 
												shalt thou condemn — And I will 
												deliver thee, not only from the 
												fury of war, but also from the 
												strife of tongues. This is the 
												heritage of the servants of the 
												Lord — This blessed condition is 
												the portion allotted them by me. 
												And their righteousness — The 
												reward of their righteousness; 
												is of me — I give it, and I will 
												continue it to them.
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