Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 11:9
They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain: for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD, as the waters cover the sea.
9. It is questionable if the subject here is still the wild beasts (as in Isa 65:25). The second half of the verse is rather against this, and it is better to translate the first half: none shall do evil or act corruptly in all, &c.
my holy mountain ] Most naturally “Zion,” but some commentators understand it of the whole hill-country of Palestine.
for the earth shall be full sea ] Cf. Hab 2:14. On the peculiar participial construction, see Driver, Tenses 135. (7) Obs.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
They shall not hurt – That is, those who are designated above under the emblems of the lion, the leopard, the bear, and the adder.
Nor destroy in all my holy mountain – Mount Zion; used here, as elsewhere, to denote the seat of his reign on the earth, or his church; the notes at Isa 1:8; Isa 2:4. The disposition of people, naturally ferocious and cruel, shall be changed so entirely, that the causes of strife and contention shall cease. They shall be disposed to do justice, and to promote each others welfare everywhere.
For the earth – That is, in the times of the Messiah, It does not say that it shall be immediate under his reign, but under his reign this shall occur on the earth.
The knowledge of the Lord – This is put for piety, as the fear of the Lord often is. The earth shall be full of a correct understanding of the existence, perfections, plans, and claims of God; and shall be disposed to yield to those claims – thus producing universal peace.
As the waters cover the sea – That is, the depths or the bottom of the sea; compare Hab 2:14. The vast waters of the ocean cover all its depths, find their way into all the caverns, flow into all the recesses on the shore – and thus shall the knowledge of Yahweh spread like deep, flowing waters, until the earth shall be pervaded and covered with it. It is evident that a time is here spoken of which has not yet fully come, and the mind is still directed onward, as was that of the prophet, to a future period when this shall be accomplished. The prophecy has been indeed in part fulfilled. Wherever the gospel has spread, its effect has been just that which is predicted here. It has calmed and subdued the angry passions of people; changed their feelings and their conduct; disposed them to peace; and tended to mitigate national ferocity, to produce kindness to captives, and to those who had been oppressed. It has mitigated laws that were cruel and bloody; and has abolished customs, games, sports, and pastimes that were ferocious and savage. It has often changed the bitter persecutor, as it did Saul of Tarsus, to the mildness and gentleness of a lamb; and it has spread an influence over nations tending to produce humanity and benevolence. It has produced mildness, gentleness, and love, in the domestic circle; changed a the cruel and lordly husband to a companion and friend; and the character of the stern and inexorable father to one of paternal kindness and peace. Wherever it has spread in truth and not in form merely, it has shed a mild, calming, and subduing influence over the passions, laws, and customs of people. But its effects have been but partially felt; and we are led, therefore, to look forward to future times, when the prophecy shall be entirely fulfilled, and the power of the gospel shall be felt in all nations.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Isa 11:9
They shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain
The golden age
Poets have sung of a golden age, saints have prayed for one, the Bible distinctly teaches that one will come.
This passage gives us the characteristics of this good time coming.
I. THE WHOLE EARTH SHALL BE THE SPIRITUAL REALISATION OF WHAT MOUNT ZION WAS BUT THE SYMBOL. What were the great ideas that Mount Zion of old symbolised They were especially two–
1. Mans meeting place with God.
2. Entire consecration to worship. It was for worship and worship only. These ideas will be fully realised in the last days. The whole earth will be mans meeting place with God, the Shechinah will gleam everywhere, light up every social circle, radiate from every institution, etc. Every spot, too, will be sacred to worship. Man will worship in everything, handicraft, commerce, politics, literature.
II. THE WHOLE EARTH SHALL BE FREED FROM INJUSTICE AND VIOLENCE. They shall not hurt nor destroy.
1. They shall not hurt. They shall not hurt by any unkind word, or any ungenerous deed, by any species of mean conduct. Exquisite delicacy of conduct shall distinguish all. Every man shall deal with his fellow with the loving tenderness of a brother.
2. They shall not destroy. They shall not destroy the property, the reputation, or the life. There shall be no wars.
III. THE WHOLE EARTH SHALL BE FLOODED WITH CHRISTIANITY. As the waters cover the sea. Full as the waters roll through the channels of the Mediterranean, will Christianity roll through every district of human life. But whilst this universal diffusion of Christianity is a characteristic of the golden age, the text suggests that it is the instrumental cause. We infer–
1. That Christianity is essentially pacific.
2. That every philanthropist should use Christianity as his grand instrument. There is no other panacea for the worlds woes. (Homilist.)
Messiahs peaceful reign
I. THE PACIFIC SPIRIT THAT SHALL BE IN THE WORLD IN MESSIAHS REIGN.
II. THE CAUSE OF ITS UNIVERSAL PREVALENCE. The knowledge with which the world will be filled. (J. Summerfield, M. A.)
For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord
The great Gospel and millennial kingdoms of Christ our Lord
1. The declaration of the word before us has never yet been fulfilled.
2. God is now about speedily to fulfil it.
I. We shall open the whole chapter which contains our text, in order to explain WHAT THE KINGDOM OF CHRIST IS of which it speaks, and we shall bring before you the great events with which the introduction of that kingdom of our Redeemer shall be attended.
1. The chapter commences with a glorious description of the Person and the office of the blessed Redeemer of men.
2. Proceed we now to open unto you the Gospel kingdom of Christ, which is contained in the following portion of the chapter. The design of the figure (Isa 11:6-9) is to show that in the great day when Christ shall execute His office in a more full and wide extent over the earth there shall be a marvellous concord and union and love among all the children of men by their being brought to worship the one Redeemer, through the one Gospel of His grace and through the sameness of His blessed Spirit.
3. With reference to the expression in our text–For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea–we have here set before us both the extent of the knowledge of the Lord, which shall characterise this kingdom of our Lord, and the depth of that knowledge also; for both are represented by this similitude of the ocean. We are to believe, therefore, that the knowledge of God which shall then prevail, shall as far surpass, in extent and in depth, the knowledge of every preceding Church state, as the waters of the ocean exceed, in width and profundity, the common lakes in the midst of kingdoms.
4. One great event that shall immediately precede this glorious issue of things shall be the conversion of Gods ancient people, the Jews; their gathering from out of all the nations of the earth into the land of their fathers; and, as I believe, their becoming the preachers of the Gospel of Christ to all those nations of the earth, which shall now be converted unto Him. This glorious event is immediately appended, in this chapter, to the description of the Gospel kingdom of the Redeemer (Isa 11:11, etc.).
5. Another mighty reality which shall accompany the introduction of the coming kingdom of our Lord and Saviour is the destruction of the anti-Christian church (the papacy).
6. The destruction of antichrist.
II. We shall present to your view THE MEANS WHICH YOU MAY THE MOST SAFELY ADOPT FOR INSTRUMENTALLY PROMOTING THE KINGDOM OF OUR ADORABLE REDEEMER amidst the kingdoms of the world. (H. Cole.)
The millennium
I. THE NATURE OF THE MILLENNIUM. It is generally believed, by judicious divines–
1. That the millennial blessedness shall consist of an extraordinary degree of spiritual knowledge.
2. That holiness shall prevail to an unexampled extent.
3. That the millennial period will be distinguished by happiness and peace altogether unexampled in any previous period of the history of the Church of Christ.
II. SOME PASSAGES WHICH SEEM PLAINLY TO INDICATE THAT SUCH A PERIOD SHALL ARRIVE (Psa 72:1-20; Isa 55:1-13; Rom 11:12; Rom 11:15; Rev 14:6).
III. EXHIBIT THE TRIUMPHS OF THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST DURING THE DAYS OF MILLENNIAL BLESSEDNESS. (A. Fletcher, D. D.)
The moral certainty of the earth being filled with the knowledge of the Lord
This prophecy was partially fulfilled when the Christian dispensation was instituted, and the Gospel of the kingdom produced the most wonderful effects on the hearts and lives of multitudes who had been the most determined enemies of the Cross. But the expression looks forward to a far more illustrious day, when the prediction will have its complete accomplishment, and the whole family of man will be blessed with the knowledge of the Lord.
I. THE IMPORT OF THE PHRASE, THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE LORD.
1. It implies an acquaintance with the character of the true God.
2. An acquaintance with the plan of salvation through the Lord Jesus Christ.
3. An acquaintance with Gods will.
II. THE MORAL CERTAINTY THAT THE EARTH SHALL BE FILLED WITH THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE LORD. Reason renders it probable, but revelation declares its certainty.
1. I argue this from a consideration of the nature of the Christian religion. Christianity is a religion of benevolence. It has nothing exclusive in its character. It is designed for man, considered as such, and is adapted to every latitude under heaven. It presents us with a worship which is simple, a faith which is easily understood, ordinances few in number, sacrifices that are unbloody, doctrines and precepts which lead to God, promises which are joy and peace, and hopes which centre in the throne of God! It is reasonable to conclude that God, who is good to all, will not limit blessings of such magnitude and so universally necessary for human happiness, to anyone particular nation or age, but that He will, in His own way and at His own time, extend the benefits of Christianity to the whole family of man.
2. The covenant relation between God and His beloved Son furnishes another guarantee that the prediction will be fulfilled.
3. We ground our hopes on the character of the Saviour as Mediator.
4. Think also of the prophetic record.
III. OUR DUTY AT THE PRESENT TIME IN CONNECTION WITH THE EXTENDING OF THIS KNOWLEDGE. The work is very great. How is it to be accomplished? By the agency of miracles? No. May we expect the Saviour to visit our earth and organise a system for the conversion of the heathen? He has done so already. He has made it our duty to use the means He has appointed. (John Hill, M. A.)
As the waters cover the sea
The expression is remarkable for its force. In looking over the face of the ocean, there are no differences to be perceived: one part is not fuller than another; one part is not covered, and another left dry; but all is one unbroken stream, filling and covering the whole. So shall it be with the Word of God among men. It shall not be known to some, and hidden from others. It shall not be fully declared in one place, and only partially set forth in another. This is not the whole purpose of the Almighty. But rather, whatever knowledge it pleases Him to give at all, shall be given equally, and without distinction. (H. A.Sullivan, M. A.)
A picture of the moral condition of the world without the knowledge of God
If the waters of the ocean were suddenly drained, and the channels of the great deep laid bare, rugged, unseemly spectacle would meet the eye. The elements of sublimity and beauty might then be seen, but strangely disfigured, and blended in rude chaotic masses: profound valleys and dark ravines, the pathways of the monsters of the deep; gloomy caverns, never visited by the light of day; towering mountains, abrupt headlands, and precipitous rocks, the cause of many disasters to the adventurous seaman, would form an uncouth, repulsive scene. All these are hidden now by a veil which the Almighty has thrown over them; He has covered them with a fluid, bright, transparent, elastic, filling all the depths, smoothing all the asperities, reducing mountains and valleys to one level, and spreading from the equator to the poles, ever in motion, ever obedient to His will, whether He bids its mountain billows utter His praise in awful tones, or its unruffled surface reflect His glories to the tranquil heavens bending over it. Like the dark, rude bed of ocean, emptied of its waters, has been the moral aspect of our world in all ages and countries since the fall. If we look abroad over the nations today, what disorder, misery, and ruin meet the eye and pain the heart! But the text speaks of a blessed change to be realised ere long: of a coming day, when the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea. (W. J. Armstrong, D. D.)
The far-spreading grace of the Holy Spirit
1. Most exactly have the figures which the Holy Spirit condescended to apply to Himself been fulfilled in the course of the dispensation; nay, even to this day. His operation has been calm, equable, gradual, far-spreading, overtaking, intimate, irresistible. What is so awfully silent, so mighty, so inevitable, so encompassing as a flood of water? Such was the power of the Spirit in the beginning, when He vouchsafed to descend as an invisible wind, as an outpoured flood. Thus He changed the whole face of the world. The ark of God moved upon the face of the waters.
2. And what the power of the Spirit has been in the world at large, that it is also in every human heart to which it comes.
(1) Any spirit which professes to come to us alone, and not to others, which makes no claim of having moved the body of the Church at all times and places, is not of God, but a private spirit of error.
(2) Vehemence, tumult, confusion, are no attributes of that benignant flood with which God has replenished the earth. That flood of grace is sedate, majestic, gentle in its operation.
(3) The Divine baptism, wherewith God visits us, penetrates through our whole soul and body. It leaves no part of us uncleansed, unsanctified. It claims the whole man for God. Any spirit which is content with what is short of this, which does not lead us to utter self-surrender and devotion, is not from God.
3. The heart of every Christian ought to represent in miniature the Catholic Church, since one Spirit makes both the whole Church and every member of it to be His temple. As He makes the Church one, which, left to itself, would separate into many parts, so He makes the soul one, in spite of its various affections and faculties, and its contradictory aims. (J. H.Newman, D. D.)
The knowledge of the Lord
As the waters cover the sea. How do they cover it?
1. Completely. There are no gaps or interspaces. The sailor is glad to get out into the open sea. Near the land he is watchful, but when his pathless track lies far from the shore he is more at ease.
2. They cover it, too, abundantly. There is nothing scanty about the sea The average depth, geographers tells us, is about thirteen times the average height of land above sea level.
3. They also cover it helpfully. The waters seem to sever country from country, but, really, they are the best means of bringing far separate lands into communication with each other. What a grand picture, then, is here suggested with regard to the knowledge of God! It will cover the earth completely. All shall know Him from the least to the greatest. It will be an abundant knowledge. As it is, the earth is full of the glory of the Lord.
Everywhere, God. The cataract utters forth God. Every common bush afire with God, but too often we only sit round it and pick blackberries. It is one thing for God to be everywhere, it is another thing for God to be recognised everywhere. It will also be a helpful knowledge. It will not lead us to make less of this worlds duties, but more. As the waters that seem to separate, yet connect all the more closely, remote lands, so the more truly men know God, the better will they know each other, and the grander will seem the duties of the common day. One great blessing resulting from that knowledge is specially mentioned in the chapter–They shall not hurt nor destroy. It is something one can hardly imagine, that beautiful time when nature shall no more be red in tooth and claw. It may be but a poetical description of the peace and harmony of the Messiahs kingdom. But there is one part, at least, will be literally true. However it be with regard to the attitude of beasts to men, or to each other, mans attitude to the beasts will be one of thoughtfulness, gentleness, and mercy. It is said that a mans dog should be the better for his Christianity, and so it will. A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast. And, of course, still more will it be true that mans attitude to his fellow man will be what it ought to be. One of the saddest thoughts in connection with this earth of ours, as it is, is the frightful callousness and unconcern with regard to human life where God, as revealed in Jesus Christ, is not known. Think of a country like Dahomey, where the most prized ornaments are human heads stuck on poles along the highways. The Church of Christ may be far from perfect in our own day, but, at least, it stands for much that is beautiful and helpful among men, and it labours and prays for the fulfilment of its hope that righteousness and peace shall at last e universal. One comprehends that the Church–even the visible building of stone and lime–stands for some measure of realised blessing among men, by even such a simple story as that of the shipwrecked mariners, in doubt as to what sort of coast they had been cast upon,–whether the inhabitants were cannibals, or with some humanity in them,–and whose fears were quite relieved when one of their number, who had climbed a neighbouring hill, came rushing back, shouting, Its all right. We are safe. I saw a church spire in the distance. The most practical and visible result of the universal knowledge of the Lord will be that mens relationship to each other will be of the happiest and most helpful kind. (J. S. Maver, M. A.)
Things must be seen through the right medium
Seeing is believing. But no man sees. Nearly every man is befooled by his own eyes. We see nothing as it really is. We are the gulls and the dupes of appearances. Said a friend to me, whilst we lived in the Alps, Can you see any living things on the side of that mountain? Whereupon I answered, There is no living thing there. It was a reckless speech. I was then the victim of incomplete sight. I was deluded, as all men are deluded, by the naked eye. Said my, friend, Look through this telescope. And I looked, and, behold! the chamois and the shepherds–the beautiful little creatures feeding on abundance of grass on the slopes of the hill. I should have looked through the telescope before I gave my judgment. Things are not all given in revelation to the naked eye. We must look through the right medium if we would see things with any approach to reality. Is this world going to be converted to Christ? Never! Why say you, never? Because there are more drunkards than pure men; there are more brothels than altars; there are more dishonest gamblers on the Exchange than there are honest men. Now look through this telescope–the Divine promises, the Divine oaths, the repeated and emphatic assurances. Look! What seest thou now, O man? I see multitudes turning unto the Lord, Ethiopia stretching out her hands unto God to receive the vessel that shall carry the news of the eternal kingdom to all places on the face of the earth. That is how we view things. (Joseph Parker, D. D.)
A sure word of prophecy
On Sabbath, 15 th May 1836, we saw the sun seized, on the very apex of his glory, as if by a black hand, and so darkened that only a thin round ring of light remained visible, and the chill of twilight came prematurely on. That mass of darkness within seemed the world lying in wickedness, and that thin round ring of light, the present progress of the Gospel in it. But not more certain were we then, that that thin round ring of light was yet to become the broad and blazing sun, than are we now, that through a Divine interposal, but not otherwise, shall the knowledge of the glory of the Lord cover the earth as the waters the sea. (G. Gilfillan.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
In my holy mountain; in Zion, in my church. Wherever the gospel comes and prevails, it will have this effect.
The earth; metonymically put for the inhabitants of the earth; and as before it was used for the greater part, Isa 11:4, so here it is used for the better part of the world.
Of the knowledge of the Lord; of saying and practical knowledge; whereby he intimates that all that savageness and malignity which is in wicked men towards true Christians proceeded from their deep ignorance, and particularly from ignorance of God; and withal, that a right knowledge of God will make a marvellous and thorough change in the dispositions and conversations of men.
The sea; the channel of the sea, the thing contained being put for the thing containing, by a metonymy common in Scripture and all authors.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
9. my holy mountainZion, thatis, Jerusalem. The seat of government and of Messiah’s throne is putfor the whole earth (Jer 3:17).
seaAs the waters findtheir way into every cavern of its depths, so Christianityshall pervade every recess of the earth (Hab2:14). As Isa 11:1-5describe the personal qualities of Messiah, and Isa11:6-9 the regenerating effects of His coming on creation,so Isa 11:10-16 theresults of it in the restoration of His people, the Jews, andthe conversion through them of the Gentiles.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain,…. In the Church, so called, in allusion to the holy hill of Zion; in the latter day, after the destruction of antichrist, there will be no more persecution of the saints; they will be no more injured nor harassed by wicked men, comparable to the above mentioned creatures, either for their cruelty or cunning; the reason follows:
for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea: full of the Gospel, the means of conveying the knowledge of Christ, and of God in Christ, of his person and office, of his grace and righteousness, of peace, pardon, life, and salvation by him. The phrase denotes the abundance and depth of the knowledge of divine things, and the large spread of the Gospel, and the multitude of persons that shall be blessed with it, and a profound knowledge of it; so that there will be none to molest, disturb, and distress the people of God, see Hab 2:14 this has had some appearance of accomplishment at several times; as at the first times of the Gospel, when the sound of it, by the apostles, went into all the earth, and diffused the savour of the knowledge of Christ in every place; and in the times of Constantine, when Paganism was abolished, and the whole empire became Christian, persecution ceased, and peace ensued, as before described; and at the Reformation, when whole nations embraced the Gospel of Christ; but the full accomplishment of it is yet to come, when the angel shall fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting Gospel to preach to all men, and the earth shall be lightened with his glory; when men shall run to and fro, and knowledge be increased, and all shall know the Lord, from the least to the greatest. This passage is applied to the times of the Messiah by the Jews, ancient and modern d.
d Zohar in Exod. fol. 28. 3. Kimchi in Joel 2. 28. Maimon. Melachim. c. 12. sect. 1. Caphtor, fol. 57. 2. and 93. 1. and 108. 1.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
9. They shall not hurt. He now declares plainly, that men themselves, having laid aside the depravity which naturally dwells in them, will be inclined, of their own accord, to do what is right. He speaks of believers who have been truly regenerated to a new life, (Rom 6:4😉 for though in the Church many hypocrites full of wickedness were mixed with the elect of God, yet they are like the Ishmaelites, whom God will cast out at the proper time. We ought also to observe, as we are taught in Psa 15:1, that those only who follow righteousness have a settled residence in the temple of God, that they may dwell there for ever. It is, therefore, a distinguishing mark of the genuine members of the Church, that they are free from all desire of doing injury to others. Hence, also, we infer, that it is a remarkable gift of the Spirit of Christ, that men abstain from being evil-doers; for by nature, ambition, pride, cruelty, and avarice, always prompt them freely and voluntarily to commit acts of injustice.
For the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord. With good reason does the Prophet add, that this invaluable blessing flows from the knowledge of God; for it abases all flesh, and teaches men to commit themselves to his trust and guardianship, and brings them into a state of brotherly harmony, when they learn that they have the same Father. (Mal 2:10.) Although many, who have not yet been renewed by the Spirit of Christ, profess to have humanity, yet it is certain that self-love ( φιλαυτίαν) reigns in them; for in all it is natural and so deeply-rooted, that they seek their own advantage and not that of others, think that they are born for themselves and not for others, and would wish to make the whole world subject to them, if they could, as Plato has judiciously observed. Hence arise fraud, perjury, theft, robbery, and innumerable crimes of this sort; and therefore there is no other remedy for subduing this lawless desire than the knowledge of God. We see how the Prophet again makes the government of Christ to rest on faith and the doctrine of the gospel, as indeed he does not gather us to himself (Eph 1:10) in another way than by enlightening our minds to reveal the heavenly life, which is nothing else, as he himself declares, than
to know the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom he hath sent. (Joh 17:3.)
As with waters that cover the sea. There is an implied comparison between the abundance of knowledge and that slender taste which God gave to the ancient people under the law. The Jews having been kept in the rudiments of childhood, (Gal 3:23,) the perfect light of wisdom hath fully shone on us by the gospel, as was also foretold by Jeremiah:
They shall not every one teach his neighbor, and a man his brother, to know God; for all shall know me, from the least to the greatest. (Jer 31:34.)
If this fullness of knowledge take possession of our minds, it will free us from all malice.
This passage also instructs us what is the character of the Church under Popery, where the light of doctrine is choked and almost extinguished, and the highest religion is made to consist in the benumbing influence of brutish stupidity. If we do not immediately possess full knowledge, we must advance from day to day, and make continual progress, (2Pe 3:18,) and in such a manner that fruit may spring from that root. Hence it is evident how little progress the greater part have made in the school of Christ, seeing that fraud and robbery and acts of violence abound everywhere.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
THE DIFFUSION OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
(For Whit-Sunday.)
Isa. 11:9. The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea.
It was promised that the waters should no more become a flood to destroy all flesh; and yet a flood there was to be, all-compassing, all-absorbing, in Gods good time and in His merciful foreknowledge when He spake the former word; but not to destroy all flesh, but to save it; and in its season the rain of grace descended (Isa. 45:8; Mat. 7:25; Psa. 98:8).
How different a fulfilment was this from that for which the apostles had been waiting! No doubt they imagined that such as Christ had been would be the Paraclete who was to comeOne whose individuality and intelligence they could not doubt, and need not take on faith. When they were waiting for this Angelic Messenger, Prophet, and Lawgiver, One higher than all created strength and wisdom suddenly came down upon them; yet not as a Lord and Governor, but as an agency or power (Act. 2:2-4).
Such was the coming of the Comforter, He who is infinitely personal, who is the One God, absolutely, fully, perfectly, simply; He it was who vouchsafed to descend upon the apostles, and that as if not a Person, but as an influence or quality, by His attribute of ubiquity diffusing Himself over their hearts, filling all the house, poured over the world, as wholly here as if He were not there, and hence vouchsafing to be compared to the inanimate and natural creation, to water and wind, which are of so subtle a nature, of so penetrating a virtue, and of so extended a range. And most exactly have these figures, which He condescended to apply to Himself, been fulfilled
I. IN THE COURSE OF THE DISPENSATION OF THE SPIRIT. His operation has been calm, equable, gradual, far-spreading, overtaking, intimate, irresistible. What is so awfully silent, so mighty, so inevitable, so encompassing as a flood of water? Fire alarms from the first: we see it and we scent it; there is crashing and downfall, smoke and flame; it makes an inroad here and there; it is uncertain and wayward;but a flood is the reverse of all this. It gives no tokens of its coming; it lets men sleep through the night, and they wake and find themselves hopelessly besieged; prompt, secret, successful, and equable, it preserves one level; it is everywhere; there is no refuge. And it makes its way to the foundations; towers and palaces rear themselves as usual; they have lost nothing of their perfection, and give no sign of danger, till at length suddenly they totter and fall. And here and there it is the same, as if by some secret understanding; for by one and the same agency the mighty movement goes on here and there and everywhere, and all things seem to act in concert with it, and to conspire together for their own ruin. And in the end they are utterly removed, and perish from off the face of the earth. Fire, which threatens more fiercely, leaves behind it relics and monuments of its agency; but water buries as well as destroys; it wipes off the memorial of its victims from the earth.
Such was the power of the Spirit in the beginning, when He vouchsafed to descend as an invisible wind, as an outpoured flood. Thus He changed the whole face of the world. For a while men went on as usual, and dreamed not what was coming: and when they were roused from their fast sleep, the work was done; it was too late for aught else but impotent anger and a hopeless struggle. The kingdom was taken away from them and given to another people. The ark of God moved upon the face of the waters. It was borne aloft by the power, greater than human, which had overspread the earth, and it triumphed, Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts.
II. IN EVERY HUMAN HEART TO WHICH HE COMES. By attending to the figure we shall understand (what concerns us most intimately) whether we are personally under His influence, or are deceiving ourselves.
(1.) Any spirit which professes to come to us alone and not to others, which makes no claim of having moved the body of the Church at all times and places, is not of God, but a private spirit of error (Psa. 65:10-12).
(2.) Vehemence, tumult, confusion, are no attributes of that benignant flood with which God has replenished the earth. That flood of grace is sedate, majestic, gentle in its operations. If at any time it seems to be violent, that violence is occasioned by some accident or imperfection of the earthen vessels into which it vouchsafed to pour itself, and is no token of the coming of Divine Power. Ecstasies and transports often proceed from false spirits, who are but imitating heavenly influences as best they may, and seducing souls to their ruin.
(3.) The Divine baptism wherewith God visits us penetrates through the whole soul and body. It leaves no part of us uncleansed, unsanctified. It claims the whole man for God. It is everywhere, in every faculty, every affection, every design, every work (2Co. 10:5). Thus
III. THE HEART OF EVERY CHRISTIAN OUGHT TO REPRESENT IN MINIATURE THE WHOLE CHURCH. One Spirit makes the whole Church and every member of it to be His temple. As He gives peace to the multitude of nations, who are naturally in discord one with another, so does He give an orderly government to the soul, and set reason and conscience as sovereigns over the inferior parts of our nature. As He leavens each rank and pursuit of the community with the principles of the doctrine of Christ, so does that same Divine leaven spread through every thought of the mind, every member of the body, till the whole is sanctified. And let us be quite sure that these two operations of the Spirit depend upon each other. We cannot hope for peace at home while we are at war abroad. We cannot hope for unity of the faith if we at our own private will make a faith for ourselves. Break unity in one point, and the fault runs through the whole body. The flood of Gods grace keeps its level, and if it is low in one place it is low in another.
CONCLUSION.As we would forward that blessed time when the knowledge of the Lord will in its fulness cover the earth, as the waters cover their bed, let us look at home, and wait on God for the cleansing and purifying of ourselves. Till we look at home, no good shall we be able to perform for the Church at large; we shall but do mischief when we intend to do good, and to us will apply that proverb, Physician, heal thyself. And let us not doubt that if we do thus proceed we shall advance the cause of Christ in the world. Let us but raise the level of religion in our hearts, and it will rise in the world. And, meantime, we shall have our true reward, which is personal, consisting in no mere external privileges, however great, but in the water of life, of which we are allowed to take freely (Psa. 36:7-9; Psa. 1:3; Isa. 32:18; Psa. 23:6).John Henry Newman: Subjects of the Day, pp. 126136.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
(9) They shall not hurt nor destroy . . .The pronoun may possibly refer to the evil beasts, the lion, the bear, the leopard, of the previous verses. The prophet, on this view, sees in his vision, as it were, a restored Eden, a paradise life, in which the fiercest brutes have lost their fierceness. The words admit, however, of being taken as a generalised statement: None shall hurt nor destroy . . . The holy mountain is none other than the mountain of the Lords house of Isa. 2:2 in its future apocalyptic glory (Eze. 40:2; Zec. 14:10), but may, perhaps, include the whole of the hill-country of Israel, as in Isa. 57:13; Psa. 78:54; Exo. 15:17.
The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord.If, as some have thought, the earth here should be the land (i.e., as in Isa. 9:19; Isa. 10:23, the land of Judah), that region is represented as the paradise centre of a restored world, to which, as in Isa. 2:2, all nations turn for light and blessing. Probably, however, the words may be taken in their wider significance. This was for the prophet the crown and consummation of the work of redemption. More than all removal of physical evil, he thought of a victory over moral and spiritual darkness. As it is, in the existing order of the world, few fear God; still fewer know Him as He should be known. But in that new earth the knowledge of Jehovah shall flow far and wide. Even as the waters of the Mediterranean (the sea which must have suggested the prophets comparison) washed the shores of the far-off isles of the Gentiles, the coasts of Chittim (Num. 24:24), as well as those of Israel, so should the knowledge of the truth of God expand beyond the limits of the people of Israel. Hence the transition was natural to the prophecies which speak at once of the restoration of Israel and the in-gathering of the heathen. It should be remembered that in Hos. 3:5; Joe. 2:28; Joe. 3:17, prophecies like in kind had preceded Isaiahs utterance. In Hab. 2:14 it is all but verbally reproduced.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
9. The figures are changed almost to literal terms. Still the tropical peculiarity lingers.
They Indefinitely, men in general.
Shall not hurt Literally, shall do no evil; shall not deal corruptly.
In all my holy mountain The holy land of the redeemed earth. There shall be no more a rapacious world-empire (lion, bear, leopard, Dan 7:4-7,) to annoy the Church struggling into life, and working up its energies through the infused spirit of the Messiah.
Knowledge True religion shall fill the earth.
The sea Literally, the depths of the sea; as waters fill the deep sea basins. For illustrating the effects and the prevalence of the effects of Messiah’s reign, more ample statement is not needed. The prophecy is in our day being fulfilled, though its complete fulfilment requires still most wonderful moral changes.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
DISCOURSE: 877
THE MILLENNIUM
Isa 11:9. The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea.
THE generality of mankind ascribe a far greater degree of moral influence to civilization, than the state of the heathen world in its most refined ages will justify. We are willing however to admit, that some good effects are to be traced to this cause. But to renew and sanctify the heart is far beyond its power: this is the province of religion, even of that religion which is revealed to us in the Gospel. The prophet has been describing in most beautiful language the change that shall one day be wrought on the face of the earth; and he traces it to the propagation of the Gospel, and the extension of divine knowledge, as its true and only source; The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, &c. for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord.
In these words he shews us,
I.
Wherein true religion consists
It cannot be more justly or comprehensively described than in these words, the knowledge of the Lord
[Many indeed, even of those who call themselves Christians, suppose that religion is altogether comprehended in doing to others as we would be done unto. But, though it must be acknowledged that this is an important branch, yet it is far from being the whole, since it relates only to the duties of the second table, and leaves out all the duties which we owe to God. We must rather say, that the knowledge of God in Christ Jesus is the sum and substance of religion: because in this is contained that vital energy which puts forth itself in all the fruits of righteousness. It is in this light that the scriptures continually represent it. The Prophet Isaiah says, By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many [Note: Isa 53:11.]. Jeremiah cautions us against glorying in any thing, but in the understanding and knowing of God as displaying justice and mercy in the person of Christ [Note: Jer 9:23-24.]. Our Lord himself affirms that, to know God, and Jesus Christ as sent by him, is life eternal [Note: Joh 17:1.]. And St. Paul, in his nervous mode of expression, counts all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord [Note: Php 3:8.].]
But by the knowledge of the Lord we must of necessity understand a practical and experimental knowledge of him
[Were a speculative knowledge sufficient, Balaam, and even the devils themselves, might vindicate their claim to religion; since he could boast, that he knew the knowledge of the Almighty, and indeed prophesied of Christ in very exalted terms [Note: Num 24:16-17.]; and they could say to Christ, We know thee who thou art, the Holy One of God [Note: Luk 4:34.]. But the only knowledge that can be considered as constituting religion, is that which the apostle so emphatically described and so earnestly desired; I count all things but dung, that I may win Christ, and know him in the power of his resurrection, in the fellowship of his sufferings, and in a conformity to his death [Note: Php 3:10.]. St. John, with a simplicity peculiar to himself, confirms this truth, saying, Hereby do we know that we know him, if we keep his commandments: he that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him [Note: 1Jn 2:3-4.].]
Painful as the general want of this religion is at present, we shall be comforted in considering,
II.
In what manner it shall hereafter prevail
The comparison, which the prophet makes between the diffusion of true religion and the waters of the unfathomable and boundless ocean, leads us naturally to observe, that the knowledge of the Lord in that day will be,
1.
Universal in its extent
[Improbable as this event may appear, there is scarcely any other so frequently and so plainly foretold in the prophetic writings as this. David, in a Psalm where he not only speaks of Christ, but even personates him, says, All the ends of the earth shall remember themselves and turn unto the Lord, and all the kindreds of the nations shall worship before him; for the kingdom is the Lords, and he is the governor among the nations [Note: Psa 22:27.]: and, in another Psalm, which is altogether on this subject, he says, Christ shall have dominion from sea to sea: all kings shall fall down before him; all nations shall serve him [Note: Psa 72:8; Psa 72:11; Psa 72:17.]. To cite what Isaiah speaks to this effect, would be to repeat whole chapters [Note: See Isaiah 49, 60.]. Jeremiah, confirming at the same time the truth we have before insisted on, that true religion consists in the knowledge of the Lord, says, In that day they shall no more teach every man his neighbour, saying, Know the Lord; for they shall all know me, from the least to the greatest of them, saith the Lord [Note: Jer 31:34.]. Daniel assures us, that the kingdom which God himself will then erect, shall break in pieces all adverse powers, and fill the whole earth [Note: Dan 2:44.]. Zechariah tells us, that Holiness to the Lord shall be written upon the very bells of the horses; that the most common things in every place shall be consecrated, as it were, to God in their daily use: and that there shall then be no more the Canaanite in the house of the Lord of Hosts [Note: Zec 14:20-21.]. The apostles also, and our Lord himself, add their testimony; St. Paul affirms, not only that the fulness of the Gentiles shall be brought in, but that the Jews shall be again engrafted on their own olive-tree [Note: Rom 11:24-25.]; and our Lord says, that all, Jews and Gentiles, shall be one fold under one shepherd [Note: Joh 10:16.]: and St. John, passing over the intermediate space of time, represents the angels in heaven as already rejoicing in the accomplishment of this event, and saying, The kingdoms of the world are become the kingdoms of the Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and ever [Note: Rev 11:15.].]
2.
Deep in its degree
[The knowledge which the Jews enjoyed was very contracted: ours, since the completion of the canon of Scripture, is considerably enlarged; insomuch that the least of true Christians is, in respect of knowledge, greater than even John the Baptist, who was himself the greatest of all the prophets [Note: Mat 11:11.]. But in that day the light will shine far brighter; and the knowledge of all true converts will be, in comparison of ours, as the oceans depth to a shallow stream. This also is declared with very abundant evidence in the prophetic writings. The veil that is spread over all nations, is then to be taken away [Note: Isa 25:7.]. Nor are any, whose eves are opened, to have an indistinct view of the truth: the Prophet Isaiah says, the eyes of them that see shall not be dim, and the ears of them that hear shall hearken; the heart also of the rash shall understand knowledge, and the tongue of the stammerers shall be ready to speak plainly [Note: Isa 32:3-4.]. In another place the prophet supposes men to have received a stroke or wound upon their eyes, and that, by the healing of that wound, a vast increase of light shall shine into their minds; The light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun shall be seven-fold, as the light of seven days, in the day that the Lord bindeth up the breach of his people, and healeth the stroke of their wound [Note: Isa 30:26.]. To mention no more passages, the same prophet represents the saints in that day as seeing Christ, not as in a shadow, like the Jews, nor as in a mirror, like us, but eye to eye, and face to face; Then shall they see eye to eye, when the Lord shall bring again Zion [Note: Isa 52:8.].]
Infer,
1.
What a glorious period will the millennium be!
[The time referred to in the text is often called the millennium, because it is to last a thousand years. And how blessed will be the state of the world during that period! How will the whole face of the earth be changed! The description of it in the preceding context, figurative as it is, will be almost literally accomplished: men, savage as the most ferocious animals, will be transformed into meek and lowly followers of the Lamb. No more wars, no more enslaving of our fellow-creatures, no more public feuds or private animosities; all will be love; there will be none to hurt or destroy in all Gods holy mountain [Note: ver. 69.]. O that the day were already come! O that God would hasten it in his time! But, if we cannot be privileged to see it, let us at least help it forward by every means in our power: let us diffuse the savour of the knowledge of Christ in every place; and exert all our influence to send the light of the Gospel to the heathen world, till Ethiopia herself shall stretch out her hands unto God.]
2.
How thankful should we be for that little knowledge, with which God, in his mercy, has favoured us!
[Surely God has not left himself without witness amongst us, but has given testimony to the word of his grace, and evinced its quickening, transforming efficacy. Doubtless there are some amongst us, whose dispositions and habits were once as adverse to the Gospel, as the wolf is to a lamb, or the leopard to a kid, who now harmoniously unite with the saints of God, and approve themselves to the world as new creatures. Till they knew the Lord, nothing could effectually tame their spirits, much less transform them into the divine image: but since the light of divine truth has shined into their hearts, they have enjoyed the peace, and exercised the love, and maintained the purity of Gods dear children. Let such then be thankful fur the distinguished mercies vouchsafed unto them: let them remember that all things, which pertain unto life and godliness, are communicated to us through the knowledge of Christ [Note: 2Pe 1:3.]; and let them seek to grow both in grace and knowledge, till from beholding Christ only as in a glass darkly, they shall see him as they are seen, and know him as they are known [Note: 1Co 13:12.].]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
Isa 11:9 They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain: for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD, as the waters cover the sea.
Ver. 9. None shall hurt. ] Here the foregoing allegory is fully explained. In God’s Holy Mountain-that is, in the Church – there shall be a holy, harmless, and a sweet harmony of hearts. The word among them shall be this, “Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another.” 1Jn 4:11 Some differences and jars there may occur among the best, as did between Paul and Barnabas, Jerome and Augustine, Luther and Zuinglius; but these last not long – at utmost but till they come to heaven; and the ground of such a distemper is, that we know but in part, and therefore love but in part. 1Co 13:9 Oh pray for that blessed sight, Eph 1:17-18 and for a fuller comprehension of those several dimensions, Eph 3:18 that the “earth may be full of the knowledge of the Lord.”
As the waters cover the sea,
a Lactant. Instit., lib. iii. cap. 86.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
in all My holy mountain. This expression occurs in the “former” portion only here and Isa 27:13, and in the “latter “portion in Isa 56:7; Isa 57:13; Isa 65:25. It is to be distinguished from other expressions in which the word “mountain” occurs.
shall be = shall assuredly become.
the knowledge. This is the sign of the fulness of blessing. See note on Isa 1:3; Compare Isa 6:3. Reference to Pentateuch (Num 14:21). App-92.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
for the earth
(See Scofield “Hab 2:14”)
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
not hurt: Isa 11:13, Isa 2:4, Isa 35:9, Isa 60:18, Job 5:23, Mic 4:2-4, Mat 5:44, Mat 5:45, Act 2:41-47, Act 4:29-35, Rom 12:17-21, Gal 5:22-24, Phi 2:14, Phi 2:15, 1Th 5:15, Rev 21:27
for the: Isa 30:26, Isa 49:6, Isa 59:19, Isa 60:1-22, Psa 22:27-31, Psa 72:19, Psa 98:2, Psa 98:3, Hab 2:14, Zec 14:9, Rom 11:25, Rom 11:26, Rev 20:2-6
Reciprocal: 1Ki 8:43 – General Psa 46:9 – maketh Psa 66:4 – General Psa 72:11 – all nations Psa 86:9 – All Psa 133:1 – how good Isa 6:3 – the whole earth Isa 19:21 – Lord shall Isa 40:5 – the glory Isa 42:4 – and the isles Isa 54:3 – thou shalt Isa 54:13 – all Isa 57:13 – my holy Isa 65:11 – my holy Isa 65:25 – shall not Isa 66:20 – my holy Jer 16:19 – Gentiles Jer 31:34 – for they Eze 16:61 – when Eze 47:5 – waters to swim in Dan 2:35 – and filled Dan 12:4 – many Mic 4:1 – the mountain Zep 2:11 – and men Zep 3:11 – because of my holy Zec 2:11 – many Zec 8:3 – the holy Zec 14:7 – at Mal 1:11 – my name Mar 4:32 – and becometh 2Pe 1:18 – the holy
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Isa 11:9. They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain Here the prophet himself gives us a key wherewith to open his meaning in the three preceding verses. By the holy mountain he means, the Christian Church, frequently termed Zion, Jerusalem, and Gods holy mountain, in the writings of the prophets. Wherever the gospel comes and prevails; wherever the true and genuine religion of Christ takes place and is established, these effects are produced. And in due time the gospel shall prevail, and the true religion of Jesus be established everywhere. For the earth The world, with its inhabitants, shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord By this he intimates, that all that savageness and malignity which are in carnal and wicked men toward the people of God, and all those unholy, unkind, and unhappy dispositions which are in any of the human race, proceed from their ignorance of God, or their want of a true and saving acquaintance with him, which, wherever it takes place, produces a marvellous and thorough change in mens hearts and lives. As the waters cover the sea As the waters spread themselves over the bottom, and entirely fill all the channels of the sea. Although this prophecy begins to be fulfilled wherever the kingdom of grace is set up among men, and is more and more fulfilled in proportion as that kingdom is enlarged; yet the perfect accomplishment of it will not be witnessed till those latter days come, when, according to the Scriptures, the knowledge and practice of Christianity will be universally diffused, and all those divine virtues which it inculcates will be most eminently exerted and displayed.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
11:9 They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain: for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD, as {d} the waters cover the sea.
(d) It will be in as great abundance as the waters in the sea.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The enemies of humankind, those that are hurtful and destructive, will no longer hurt or destroy people in God’s holy mountain (kingdom, cf. Isa 2:2-3; Dan 2:32; Dan 2:45; et al.)-because everyone will know (relationally) the Lord (cf. Jer 31:34). "Mountain" seems to refer metaphorically here to God’s kingdom, since it is the whole earth, not just a small region, that will be full of the knowledge of the LORD. "The earth will be filled with the knowledge of the LORD" means: "there will be universal submission to the LORD’s sovereignty" (NET; cf. Isa 11:2). The animals contrasted in Isa 11:6-8 undoubtedly represent people. Peaceful conditions in the animal kingdom could not be all that Isaiah intended but global peace.