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												Verse 1-2Isaiah 64:1-2. O that thou 
												wouldest rend the heavens — This 
												God is said to do, or to bow the 
												heavens, and come down, when he 
												gives a very signal display of 
												his power. It is a metaphor 
												taken from men who, when they 
												would resolutely and effectually 
												help a person in distress, break 
												through every opposition and 
												obstacle. That the mountains 
												might flow down, &c. — Or, melt; 
												that all impediments might be 
												removed out of the way. There 
												seems to be an allusion to God’s 
												coming down upon mount Sinai in 
												those terrible flames of fire, 
												5:4-5. As when the melting fire 
												burneth — Come with such zeal 
												for thy people that the solid 
												mountains may be no more before 
												thee than metal that runs, or 
												water that boils by the force of 
												a vehement fire; to make thy 
												name — That is, thy power; known 
												to thine adversaries — That 
												thine enemies, who are also the 
												enemies of thy people, may know 
												thy power, and that thy name may 
												be dreaded among them.
 
 Verse 3-4
 Isaiah 64:3-4. When thou didst 
												terrible things — This may 
												relate to what he did first in 
												Egypt, and afterward in the 
												wilderness; which we looked not 
												for — Such things as we could 
												not have expected; the mountains 
												flowed down — See Exodus 19:18; 
												Deuteronomy 32:22; Psalms 18:7, 
												with the notes. But Lowth 
												proposes another interpretation, 
												which he thinks agrees better 
												with what follows, namely, When 
												thou shalt do terrible and 
												unexpected things, when thou 
												shalt come down, (and visibly 
												interpose for the deliverance of 
												thy people,) the mountains shall 
												melt at thy presence. For since 
												the beginning of the world, &c. 
												— “The methods of thy 
												dispensations, whereby thou wilt 
												fulfil thy promises made to thy 
												people, are beyond any thing we 
												can think or conceive.” Bishop 
												Lowth translates this verse, 
												more agreeably both to the 
												Hebrew and the LXX., thus: For 
												“never have men heard, nor 
												perceived, by the ear; nor hath 
												eye seen a God besides thee, who 
												doeth such things for those, 
												that trust in him.” Some of the 
												Jewish doctors have understood 
												this passage of the blessings 
												belonging to the days of the 
												Messiah; and to them the apostle 
												applies it, 1 Corinthians 2:9. 
												Others extend it to the glories 
												of the world to come. Of both 
												these it may be truly said, that 
												from the beginning of the world 
												men have not, either by hearing 
												or seeing; or, as the apostle 
												adds, by any reasonings or 
												conceptions of their own minds, 
												come to the full knowledge of 
												them. None have seen or heard, 
												or can understand, but God 
												himself; and so far as he has 
												been, and is, pleased to reveal 
												it by his Spirit, what the 
												provision is, which is made for 
												the present and future felicity 
												of holy souls; or, as our 
												translation here expresses it, 
												of those that wait for him, 
												namely, in the way of duty; that 
												sincerely and earnestly desire, 
												and live in the daily and ardent 
												expectation of, the salvation he 
												hath promised them. The apostle 
												has it, that love him; to show 
												that as none can wait for him 
												who do not love him, so all that 
												love him will wait for him.
 
 Verse 5
 Isaiah 64:5. Thou meetest him 
												that rejoiceth, &c. — “Thou 
												preventest, with the blessings 
												of thy goodness, those that take 
												pleasure in the ways of thy 
												commandments, and live under a 
												continual sense of thy 
												providence.” Behold, thou art 
												wroth — Or greatly angry; for, 
												or because, we have sinned — 
												Have been guilty of many and 
												great offences, whereby we have 
												provoked thy heavy displeasure. 
												In those — Those ways of thine, 
												thy ways of mercy, in which we 
												have remembered thee; is 
												continuance — Or, perpetuity; 
												or, in those thou art ever to be 
												found; and we shall be saved — 
												At last, though thou art wroth, 
												and we have sinned. “The mercy 
												of the Lord is from everlasting 
												to everlasting on them that fear 
												him,” Psalms 103:17. He always 
												waits to be gracious, and 
												through all ages meets his 
												worshippers in his ordinances. 
												This seems to be the sense of 
												this obscure passage; at least 
												it will bear this sense; and, as 
												it is in perfect consistency 
												with the general tenor of the 
												Scriptures, it is certainly 
												safer to admit it, unless a 
												better can be proposed, than to 
												have recourse to any mere 
												conjectural alterations of the 
												Hebrew text.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Isaiah 64:6-7. We are all as an 
												unclean thing — Or, unclean 
												person, as שׂמאequally 
												signifies. He seems to allude to 
												persons unclean through the 
												leprosy, which was the highest 
												degree of uncleanness among the 
												Jews. He means that the body of 
												the people were like one under a 
												ceremonial pollution, who was 
												not admitted into the courts of 
												the tabernacle; or like one 
												labouring under some loathsome 
												disease. We are all, by sin, not 
												only become obnoxious to God’s 
												justice, but odious to his 
												holiness. “The prophets 
												frequently borrow their images 
												from the received customs and 
												spiritual ceremonies of the 
												nations among which the 
												distinction between things clean 
												and unclean makes no small 
												figure; and under these images 
												they frequently describe moral 
												defects and religious offences, 
												as in the present passage.” And 
												all our righteousnesses, or, 
												justifications, are as filthy 
												rags — As rags, which cannot 
												cover us; as filthy rags, which 
												would only defile us. With 
												respect to the Jews, he refers 
												to all those external ceremonies 
												and services wherein they placed 
												merit, and whereby they hoped 
												for justification, Romans 10:3, 
												at the same time that they 
												neglected moral duties, and were 
												guilty even of very gross 
												violations of God’s holy law. 
												Micah, who lived at the same 
												time, speaks in the same manner, 
												Micah 7:2-4. But the prophet’s 
												declaration is true, if 
												considered as comprehending the 
												best works and actions that can 
												be performed by any of mankind; 
												for all our works have so great 
												an alloy of imperfection, that 
												they cannot justify us before a 
												holy and just God; see Psalms 
												143:2; Romans 3:19-20; Galatians 
												2:16. And our iniquities, like 
												the wind — A wind that withers 
												both leaves and fruit, or that 
												sweeps away all before it; have 
												taken us away — Out of our own 
												land, and from all our 
												privileges and blessings, and 
												scattered us abroad through all 
												the earth; or from God’s favour, 
												into a state of condemnation and 
												wrath. And there is none — Or, 
												yet there is none, that is, few: 
												they are not to be discerned 
												among the multitude; that 
												calleth upon thy name — That 
												call upon thee as they ought, as 
												Jacob, Moses, and David did. 
												This shows the universal 
												depravity and apostacy of the 
												Jewish people at the time 
												referred to; that stirreth up 
												himself to take hold on thee — 
												On thy power, truth, and love by 
												faith; that uses fervency and 
												importunity in prayer to recover 
												thy favour, which has been 
												withdrawn from us, and to obtain 
												the removal of the various and 
												heavy calamities with which we 
												are oppressed. For thou hast 
												consumed us — Hebrew, המוגנו, 
												hast melted us; our sins have 
												kindled such a fire of thy wrath 
												against us that we are melted 
												with it.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Isaiah 64:8-9. But now, O Lord, 
												thou art our Father — 
												Notwithstanding all this, thou 
												art our Father, having both 
												created and adopted us; 
												therefore pity us thy children; 
												we are the clay, and thou our 
												potter — We are in thy hands as 
												clay in the hands of the potter: 
												thou canst form us, and dispose 
												of us as thou pleasest. And we 
												will not quarrel with thee, 
												however thou art pleased to deal 
												with us. We are all the work of 
												thy hands — Therefore forget us 
												not, forsake us not, but spare, 
												and preserve, and save us. Be 
												not wroth with us very sore — 
												But let thy anger be mitigated 
												by the clemency and compassion 
												of a father. Neither remember 
												iniquity for ever — Thou hast 
												been angry with us a long time, 
												be not so for ever. Behold, &c. 
												we are thy people — Thy peculiar 
												people, Isaiah 63:19. Another 
												argument to enforce the former 
												petition.
 
 Verses 10-12
 Isaiah 64:10-12. Thy holy cities 
												— Zion and Jerusalem, mentioned 
												immediately after; or other 
												cities also in the land of Judea 
												besides these two; called holy, 
												because God had his synagogues 
												in them, in which he was 
												worshipped, Psalms 74:8. Zion is 
												a wilderness, &c. — Utterly 
												waste: not only the ordinary 
												cities, but Zion and Jerusalem 
												themselves are in a state of 
												ruin and desolation. Our holy 
												and beautiful house — Our 
												temple. Not only our principal 
												cities, but even our temple, 
												which we thought sacred and 
												inviolable, in which we gloried, 
												because it was thine, and our 
												fathers’ house, and ours: the 
												place where thy holy service was 
												performed, and thy glory and 
												presence were wont to be 
												manifested. Where our fathers 
												praised thee — They do not 
												presume to mention themselves, 
												having been every way so very 
												abominable; but put the Lord in 
												mind of their fathers, many of 
												whom were his faithful servants, 
												having praised him there. Is 
												burned up with fire — This 
												relates to the burning of the 
												temple by the Romans, who made 
												an entire destruction of it, 
												according to our Saviour’s 
												prediction, Matthew 24:2. And 
												all our pleasant things are laid 
												waste — Not only the pleasant 
												land, but all that was 
												magnificent, ornamental, or 
												desirable in Jerusalem, or any 
												other city, town, or place. Wilt 
												thou refrain, or, contain, 
												thyself for, or, at, these 
												things — Wilt thou behold them 
												unmoved, as an indifferent 
												spectator? Wilt thou neither 
												show thy compassion toward thy 
												servants, nor thy resentment 
												toward thine enemies? Wilt thou 
												hold thy peace — Wilt thou be as 
												one that regards not? And 
												afflict us very sore — And 
												persist to afflict us in thy 
												continued hot displeasure?
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