Isaiah 52 - Introduction

This chapter is intimately connected with the preceding, and, with that, constitutes one connected portion (see the analysis of Isaiah 51) This portion, however, extends only to Isaiah 52:13 of this chapter, where there commences a prophecy extending through Isaiah 53:1, relating solely to the Messi... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:1

AWAKE, AWAKE - (See the notes at Isaiah 51:9). This address to Jerusalem is intimately connected with the closing verses of the preceding chapter. Jerusalem is there represented as down-trodden in the dust before her enemies. Here she is described under the image of a female that had been clad in th... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:2

SHAKE THYSELF FROM THE DUST - To sit on the ground, to sit in the dust, is an expression descriptive of mourning Job 2:13. Jerusalem is here called on to arise and shake off the dust, as indicating that the days of her grief were ended, and that she was about to be restored to her former beauty and... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:3

YE HAVE SOLD YOURSELVES FOR NOUGHT - You became captives and prisoners without any price being paid for you. You cost nothing to those who made you prisoners. The idea is, that as they who had made them prisoners had done so without paying any price for them, it was equitable that they should be rel... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:4

FOR THUS SAITH THE LORD GOD - In order to show them that he could redeem them without money, God reminds them of what had been done in former times. The numerous captives in Egypt, whose services were so valuable to the Egyptians, and whom the Egyptians were so unwilling to suffer to depart, he had... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:5

NOW, THEREFORE, WHAT HAVE I HERE? - In Babylon, referring to the captivity of the Jews there. The idea is, that a state of things existed there which demanded his interposition as really as it did when his people had been oppressed by the Egyptians, or by the Assyrian. His people had been taken away... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:6

THEREFORE MY PEOPLE SHALL KNOW MY NAME - The idea in this verse is, that his people should have such exhibitions of his power as to furnish to them demonstration that he was God.... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:7

HOW BEAUTIFUL UPON THE MOUNTAINS - This passage is applied by Paul to the ministers of the gospel (see Romans 10:15). The meaning here seems to be this: Isaiah was describing the certain return of the Jews to their own land. He sees in vision the heralds announcing their return to Jerusalem running... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:8

THY WATCHMEN - This language is taken from the custom of placing watchmen on the walls of a city, or on elevated towers, who could see if an enemy approached, and who of course would be the first to discern a messenger at a distance who was coming to announce good news. The idea is, that there would... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:9

BREAK FORTH INTO JOY - Jerusalem, at the time here referred to, was lying waste and in ruins. This call on the waste places of Jerusalem to break out into expressions of praise, is in accordance with a style which frequently occurs in Isaiah, and in other sacred writers, by which inanimate objects a... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:10

THE LORD HATH MADE BARE HIS HOLY ARM - That is, in delivering his people from bondage. This metaphor is taken from warriors, who made bare the arm for battle; and the sense is, that God had come to the rescue of his people as a warrior, and that his interpositions would be seen and recognized and ac... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:11

DEPART YE, DEPART YE - This is a direct address to the exiles in their captivity. The same command occurs in Isaiah 48:20 (see the notes on that place). It is repeated here for the sake of emphasis; and the urgency of the command implies that there was some delay likely to be apprehended on the part... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:12

FOR YE SHALL NOT GO OUT WITH HASTE - As if driven out, or compelled to flee. You shall not go from Babylon as your fathers went from Egypt, in a rapid flight, and in a confused and tumultuous manner (see Deuteronomy 16:3). The idea here is, that they should have time to prepare themselves to go out,... [ Continue Reading ]

Isaiah 52:13-15

NOTES ON Isaiah 52:13 AND Isaiah 53:1 The most important portion of Isaiah, and of the Old Testament, commences here, and here should have been the beginning of a new chapter. It is the description of the suffering Messiah, and is continued to the close of the next chapter. As the closing verses of... [ Continue Reading ]

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