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												Verse 1Isaiah 58:1. Cry aloud — Be 
												faithful, plain, and earnest in 
												thy addresses, remonstrances, 
												reproofs, and exhortations to 
												and among my people; and spare 
												not — Forbear not to speak 
												whatsoever I command thee for 
												their conviction and 
												reformation. Lift up thy voice 
												like a trumpet — Be not afraid 
												to exert thy voice and spend thy 
												strength in this work. Give an 
												alarm which all may hear. Show 
												my people their transgressions — 
												Set their sins, all their sins, 
												before them, in a true point of 
												view, and with all their 
												aggravations, especially the 
												iniquities of their holy things, 
												and the hypocrisy of their 
												religious services, (Isaiah 
												58:2,) that they may be brought 
												to true repentance for them.
 
 Verse 2
 Isaiah 58:2. Yet they seek me 
												daily — They cover all their 
												wickedness with a profession of 
												religion, from time to time 
												resorting to my house, 
												pretending to ask counsel of me, 
												and to desire and seek my favour 
												and blessing. And delight to 
												know my ways — That is, either, 
												1st, They seem to delight to 
												know them, men being often said 
												in Scripture to be or do that 
												which they seem or profess to be 
												or do: or, 2d, They really 
												delight; for there are many men 
												who take some pleasure in 
												knowing God’s will and word, and 
												yet do not conform their lives 
												to them. As a nation that did 
												righteousness — As if they 
												really were a righteous people; 
												and forsook not the ordinance, 
												&c. — As if they were not guilty 
												of any apostacy from God, or 
												neglect of, or disobedience to, 
												his precepts. They ask of me the 
												ordinances of justice — As if 
												they desired and resolved to 
												observe them. They delight — In 
												appearance or reality; in 
												approaching unto God — In coming 
												to my temple to pray to me, 
												receive instruction, or offer 
												sacrifices.
 
 Verse 3
 Isaiah 58:3. Wherefore have we 
												fasted, &c. — They complain of 
												hard usage from God; that 
												although they prayed, and 
												fasted, and observed the rest of 
												his ordinances, all which are 
												comprehended under the title of 
												fasting, all their labour was 
												lost, and God neither delivered 
												nor regarded them. Wherefore 
												have we afflicted our soul — 
												Defrauded our appetites with 
												fasting, of which this phrase is 
												used, Leviticus 16:29; Leviticus 
												23:27; Leviticus 23:29. Behold, 
												in the day of your fast — In 
												those solemn days of fasting 
												which I have appointed; or, in 
												those times when I have called 
												you, by the course of my 
												providence, and counsels of my 
												prophets, unto fasting, and 
												weeping, and mourning, Isaiah 
												22:12; ye find pleasure, and 
												exact, &c. — Or, as the words 
												may be more significantly 
												rendered, You find wherewithal 
												to please yourselves, and are 
												rigorous in grieving, or 
												burdening, others: that is, You 
												gratify your own passions, 
												especially your covetousness, 
												and you oppress the poor, and so 
												are defective in the duties of 
												justice and charity. By labours 
												may be meant money gotten by 
												labour, and lent to others, 
												either for their need or the 
												lender’s advantage. For labour 
												is often put for the fruit of 
												labour, as Deuteronomy 28:33; 
												Isaiah 45:14. But the Hebrew 
												here, עצביכם, is literally, your 
												griefs, namely, the things which 
												cause griefs, which are grievous 
												and burdensome to others, as 
												either, 1st, Hard service 
												required of servants above their 
												strength, or beyond the time 
												limited by God for their 
												service, of which see Jeremiah 
												34:13-16 : or, 2d, Debts, which 
												they required, either with usury 
												or with rigour and cruelty, when 
												the general law of charity, or 
												God’s particular law, enjoined 
												the release, or, at least, the 
												forbearance of them. See 
												Nehemiah 5:1-2.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Isaiah 58:4-5. Behold, ye fast 
												for strife — Your fasting days, 
												wherein you ought, in a special 
												manner, to implore the mercy of 
												God, and to show compassion to 
												men, you employ in injuring or 
												quarrelling with your brethren, 
												your servants, or debtors, or in 
												contriving mischief against 
												them. Or the meaning is, that 
												“their fasting increased their 
												self-preference, and excited 
												them to fierce controversies or 
												bitter resentments.” And to 
												smite with the fist of 
												wickedness — It was “the cloak 
												of, and commutation for, their 
												exactions and oppressions of the 
												poor, whom they most unjustly 
												smote and abused for not 
												complying in every thing with 
												their inclinations.” — Scott. Ye 
												shall not fast as ye do this day 
												— Such a fast as this I cannot 
												accept of as an act of worship, 
												or bless as a means of grace. To 
												make your voice to be heard on 
												high — In strife and debate, or 
												by way of ostentation. Is it 
												such a fast that I have chosen? 
												— That is, which I approve of, 
												accept, or delight in, because 
												we delight in what we freely 
												choose. A day for a man to 
												afflict his soul — To keep 
												himself low, or to chastise 
												himself by depriving his body of 
												food, as a means to produce 
												inward sorrow for sin, and true 
												humiliation of soul before God. 
												The prophet seems to have 
												delivered this discourse upon, 
												or to have intended it for, some 
												extraordinary day of 
												humiliation, when it was usual 
												for the prophets to give public 
												exhortations to the people. Is 
												it to bow down his head as a 
												bulrush? — Here the prophet 
												notices those external gestures, 
												postures, and signs of 
												penitence, which the Jews of his 
												time, and in after ages, 
												(Matthew 6:16,) joined with 
												their hypocritical fasts. And to 
												spread sackcloth and ashes under 
												him — The Jews, to express their 
												sorrow, made use of sackcloth 
												and ashes two ways: 1st, 
												Sometimes by putting sackcloth 
												upon their bodies, as 1 Kings 
												21:27; Psalms 69:11; and casting 
												ashes upon their heads, 2 Samuel 
												13:19 : and, 2d, By spreading 
												sackcloth under them, and lying 
												down upon ashes, Esther 4:3; Job 
												2:8. The intent of putting on 
												sackcloth was to afflict the 
												body by its unpleasing 
												harshness, and the ashes were 
												meant to represent their own 
												vileness, as being but dust and 
												ashes; and their lying on them 
												to signify that they abhorred 
												and were ashamed of themselves. 
												Wilt thou call this a fast? — 
												Canst thou, upon rational 
												grounds, believe or suppose it 
												to be so? Surely it has nothing 
												in it but the lifeless form, 
												empty shadow, or dumb signs of a 
												fast: nothing of deep 
												humiliation appearing in it, or 
												real reformation proceeding from 
												it. Not that the prophet blames 
												them for afflicting themselves 
												by these external rites, for 
												these are elsewhere commanded of 
												God; but that which he condemns 
												is their hypocrisy in separating 
												true humiliation from them, and 
												contenting themselves with using 
												these signs, while they stopped 
												short of the thing signified by 
												them. And an acceptable day to 
												the Lord — A day that God will 
												approve of. Hebrew, ויום רצון, A 
												day of acceptance, or that will 
												turn to a good account on your 
												behalf.
 
 Verse 6
 Isaiah 58:6. Is not this the 
												fast that I have chosen? — Or 
												approve, as before, Isaiah 58:5. 
												Or ought not such a fast to be 
												accompanied with such things as 
												these? He now proceeds to show 
												the concomitants of a true fast; 
												namely, to exercise works of 
												justice and charity. To loose 
												the bands of wickedness — 
												Namely, the cruel obligations of 
												usury and oppression. To undo 
												the heavy burdens — Hebrew, the 
												bundles of the yoke, as in the 
												margin; by which may possibly be 
												intended bundles of writings, 
												acknowledgments, bonds, 
												mortgages, &c., which the 
												usurers had lying by them. The 
												former are thought to relate to 
												unjust and unlawful obligations, 
												extorted by force or fear, which 
												the prophet would have 
												cancelled: this latter, to just 
												debts contracted through poverty 
												and necessity, the rigour 
												whereof he would have abated. 
												And to let the oppressed go free 
												— Those grieved or vexed, 
												whether by the griping of usury 
												or the bonds of slavery, 
												accompanied with cruel usage; or 
												those confined or shut up in 
												prisons; and that ye break every 
												yoke — Namely, which is 
												grievous; that you free your 
												dependants and servants, and all 
												that are under your power, from 
												all sorts of vexations and 
												oppressions.
 
 Verse 7
 Isaiah 58:7. Is it not — Namely, 
												the fast that pleases me. Having 
												shown the evil they were to 
												abstain from in order to keep an 
												acceptable fast, namely, every 
												species of cruelty, he here 
												proceeds to speak of the duty 
												that was required, namely, the 
												exercise of every kind of mercy, 
												as a necessary fruit of true 
												repentance, Daniel 4:27; Luke 
												19:8. For there are two parts of 
												righteousness toward our 
												neighbour; one, to do wrong to 
												no man; the other, to do good to 
												all: which two must always go 
												together, and never be separated 
												from each other, especially in 
												acts and seasons of humiliation. 
												And, as under the evils here 
												mentioned are comprehended all 
												other evils whatsoever, all 
												which men must abstain from if 
												they would give evidence of true 
												humiliation and godly sorrow, so 
												in the duties here spoken of are 
												comprised all the duties, to the 
												practice of which they ought to 
												apply themselves as the effects 
												of true repentance. To deal — 
												The word פרסproperly signifies 
												to divide, or to break into 
												parts; thy bread to the hungry — 
												Bread is here put for all things 
												necessary for the support of 
												human life, any or every kind of 
												food. And that thou bring the 
												poor — Those that are not only 
												needy, as to their present 
												condition, but helpless, and 
												utterly unable to support 
												themselves; that are cast out — 
												Forced from their dwellings, 
												deprived of house and harbour by 
												the injustice of the powerful, 
												or by persecution for 
												conscience’ sake, and who are 
												thereby become wanderers, and 
												have no abiding place; to thy 
												house — That thou be hospitable, 
												and make thy house a shelter to 
												them, or provide lodging for 
												them. When thou seest the naked 
												— Those that either have no 
												clothes, or are so poorly 
												clothed that their clothing is 
												not sufficient to preserve them 
												from perishing by cold; that 
												thou cover him — That thou give 
												them raiment suited to these 
												wants, James 2:15-16. And that 
												thou hide not thyself — That 
												thou not only seek no occasion 
												to excuse thyself, but that, out 
												of compassion, thou apply 
												thyself heartily and speedily to 
												his relief; that thou be not 
												like the priest and Levite, but 
												like the good Samaritan, Luke 
												10:31-35. From thine own flesh — 
												Some restrain this to our own 
												kindred, but this would confine 
												our charity within too narrow a 
												compass, inasmuch as often, nay, 
												perhaps most commonly, the 
												necessities of others are 
												greater than those of our own 
												relations; neither is it 
												congruous, that the other words 
												here should be taken in the 
												greatest latitude, and this 
												alone be confined within such 
												narrow limits. Our Saviour 
												teaches us to consider every man 
												as our neighbour. And surely we 
												can look on no man but there we 
												contemplate our own flesh; and 
												therefore it is barbarous, not 
												only to tear, but not to love 
												and succour him. Therefore feed 
												him as thou wouldest feed 
												thyself, or be fed; shelter him 
												as thou wouldest shelter 
												thyself, or be sheltered; clothe 
												him as thou wouldest clothe 
												thyself, or be clothed, if in 
												any of these respects thou wert 
												in his circumstances.
 
 Verse 8
 Isaiah 58:8. Then shall thy 
												light — Matter or cause of 
												rejoicing, break forth as the 
												morning — Arise as certainly and 
												speedily as in the morning the 
												light arises out of darkness. It 
												shall not only appear, but 
												break, or dart itself forth, 
												notwithstanding all 
												obstructions, as the sun breaks 
												and pierces through a cloud. So 
												ready is God to help his people 
												when they are truly humbled! 
												Thus quickly and clearly does 
												salvation break forth upon them! 
												And thy health shall spring 
												forth speedily — The recovery of 
												thy former prosperous condition. 
												Another metaphor to express the 
												same thing. And thy 
												righteousness shall go before 
												thee — To prepare thy way to 
												safety and happiness; ensuring 
												to thee, O my church, the 
												peculiar direction and care of 
												thy God, and the favour and 
												approbation of wise and good 
												men; see Romans 14:17-18. Or 
												manifold blessings shall be 
												bestowed upon thee, upon all 
												occasions, as the reward of thy 
												righteousness. The glory of the 
												Lord shall be thy rereward — The 
												glorious presence, power, and 
												providence of God shall protect 
												and secure thee. Thus the angel 
												of his presence secured the 
												Israelites when they came up out 
												of Egypt. Or, the meaning may 
												be, A glorious state shall 
												succeed this thy present 
												calamitous condition.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Isaiah 58:9-10. Then shalt thou 
												call, &c. — They made great 
												complaint, Isaiah 58:3, that God 
												took no notice of their 
												services, which complaint he 
												seems now to refer to, as if he 
												had said, These conditions being 
												observed, call upon me, and thou 
												shalt see I will regard, Psalms 
												34:15. The Lord shall answer — 
												He will give an effectual 
												demonstration that he hears 
												thee. He shall say, Here I am — 
												A phrase that signifies a person 
												to be ready at hand to help. If 
												thou take away from the midst of 
												thee — From among you; the yoke 
												— All those pressures and 
												grievances before mentioned. The 
												putting forth of the finger — 
												Done by way of scoff, or 
												disdainful insulting; and 
												speaking vanity — Any kind of 
												evil words. Bishop Lowth renders 
												it, “The pointing of the finger, 
												and the injurious speech.” If 
												thou draw out — Open, as when we 
												open a store to satisfy the 
												wants of the needy; thy soul to 
												the hungry — Thy affection, that 
												is, thy pity and compassion, to 
												those in want of the necessaries 
												of life; and satisfy the 
												afflicted soul — With a real, 
												substantial benefit, not 
												contenting thyself with giving 
												him merely kind words. For here 
												the prophet expresses the work 
												that is to be done, as in the 
												former clause the affection 
												wherewith it is to be done; 
												otherwise it would only be what 
												the Apostle James reproves, 
												James 2:15-16. Then shall thy 
												light rise in obscurity — See on 
												Isaiah 58:8; and thy darkness be 
												as the noon-day — In the very 
												darkness of the affliction 
												itself, thou shalt have comfort, 
												Psalms 112:4. There it shall be 
												as the morning, still 
												increasing, here as the 
												noon-day, in its zenith, and 
												height of perfection.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Isaiah 58:11-12. And the Lord 
												shall guide thee — Namely, as a 
												shepherd leads his sheep. He 
												adds continually, to show that 
												his conduct and blessing should 
												not be momentary, or of a short 
												continuance, but all along as it 
												was to Israel in the wilderness. 
												And satisfy thy soul in drought 
												— Thou shalt have plenty, when 
												others are in scarcity. And make 
												fat thy bones — This may be 
												spoken in opposition to the sad 
												effects of famine, whereby the 
												flesh is consumed away, that it 
												cannot be seen, and the bones 
												that were not seen, stick out. 
												Thou shalt be like a garden — If 
												thou relieve the poor, thou 
												shalt never be poor, but as a 
												well-watered garden, always 
												flourishing. Like a spring, 
												whose waters fail not — Hebrew, 
												deceive not, a metaphor which 
												further signifies also the 
												continuance of this flourishing 
												state, that it should not be 
												like a land-flood, or brooks, 
												that are soon dried up with 
												drought. Thou shalt be fed with 
												a spring of blessings, that will 
												never fail. And they of thee — A 
												remnant of thee, or rather, thy 
												posterity, shall build the old 
												waste places — The places which 
												have long lain waste. Bishop 
												Lowth renders it, The ancient 
												ruins. If understood of the Jews 
												returned from Babylon, the 
												meaning is, that they should 
												rebuild Jerusalem and the 
												temple, with the other cities 
												and towns of Judea. The 
												foundations of many generations 
												— Either the foundations that 
												were laid many generations ago, 
												or that should continue for many 
												generations yet to come. And 
												thou shalt be called — That is, 
												deservedly, and to thine honour, 
												the repairer of the breach — Or, 
												breaches; for the word is put 
												here collectively for those 
												breaches which God’s judgments 
												had made among them, by 
												suffering their enemies to 
												demolish their cities and towns, 
												and to destroy their state. The 
												restorer of paths — Those paths 
												that led from city to city, 
												which, being now laid desolate 
												and uninhabited, were grown over 
												with grass and weeds; to dwell 
												in — These accommodations being 
												recovered, their ancient cities 
												might be fit to be re-inhabited. 
												According to Vitringa, who 
												considers the whole of this and 
												the preceding verse as being 
												metaphorical, the meaning is, 
												“That from the city of God, (the 
												spiritual Jerusalem,) 
												flourishing in the manner above 
												described, should go forth, 
												those who should renew and 
												restore the churches long laid 
												waste, as immersed in thick 
												darkness and superstition, and 
												governed by faithless pastors, 
												and so unworthy the name of the 
												churches of God; and who should 
												collect together, erect, and 
												build anew the foundations of 
												those churches; that is, the 
												heads of Christian doctrine 
												delivered by the prophets and 
												apostles, which, though they had 
												retained them in the confession 
												of their faith, they had mixed 
												with heterogeneous doctrines; so 
												that they might be esteemed as 
												wholly subverted and 
												overthrown.”
 
 Verse 13
 Isaiah 58:13. If thou turn away 
												— If thou take no unnecessary 
												journeys, nor do any servile 
												works on the sabbath day; or, 
												metaphorically, if thou keep thy 
												mind and affections disengaged, 
												and free from secular cares and 
												concerns, and restrain thyself 
												from whatever might profane it; 
												from doing thy pleasure on my 
												holy day — From taking the 
												liberty of doing what thou 
												pleasest, without the control 
												and restraint of conscience and 
												the law of God; or from 
												indulging thyself in the 
												pleasures of sense and carnal 
												delights; and call the sabbath a 
												delight — Not looking on the 
												duties of it as a burden and 
												drudgery, but performing them 
												with cheerfulness, and 
												delighting in all its ordinances 
												and services; the holy of the 
												Lord — Or, to the Lord, that is, 
												dedicated to him, consecrated to 
												his service; honourable — 
												Namely, the chief of days, 
												worthy of all honour, and 
												therefore honourable because 
												holy: and shalt honour him — 
												That is, The Lord, whose day it 
												is; not doing thine own ways — 
												Or works, or pursuing thy usual 
												course of life, or thy worldly 
												business; nor speaking thine own 
												words — The words that are thine 
												own, in opposition to what God 
												commands to be spoken; words 
												proceeding from the corruption 
												of human nature, or the vanity 
												of the human mind; or, not 
												speaking words unsuitable to the 
												work of the day, tending neither 
												to thy edification nor comfort.
 
 
 Verse 14
 Isaiah 58:14. Then shalt thou 
												delight thyself in the Lord — 
												This refers to the preceding 
												verse, as if he had said, If 
												thou wilt delight thyself in the 
												sabbath, then thou shalt delight 
												in the God of the sabbath, 
												namely, in his goodness and 
												faithfulness to thee, and in the 
												assurance of his love and 
												favour. I will cause thee to 
												ride, &c. — Thou shalt be above 
												the reach of danger. And feed 
												thee with the heritage of Jacob 
												— Thou shalt enjoy the good of 
												the land of Canaan, which God 
												promised as a heritage to Jacob 
												and his seed, Genesis 35:12. Or, 
												figuratively understood, thou 
												shalt enjoy temporal as well as 
												spiritual blessings. The Lord 
												will withhold from thee no 
												manner of thing which he sees to 
												be for thy prosperity and 
												happiness. For the mouth of the 
												Lord hath spoken it — The 
												promise is sure, and shall 
												infallibly be fulfilled, having 
												proceeded from the mouth of him 
												who cannot lie.
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