Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 40:2
Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received of the LORD’s hand double for all her sins.
2. speak ye comfortably to ] Lit. “speak to the heart of.” To “speak to one’s own heart” is to whisper or meditate (1Sa 1:13); to speak to the heart of another is to soothe, or persuade, or comfort. For the meaning of the phrase, see Gen 34:3; Jdg 19:3 ; 2Sa 19:7; Hos 2:14; and esp. Gen 50:21; and Rth 2:13, where it is parallel to “comfort” as here.
Jerusalem ] an ideal representation of the people, like Zion in Isa 40:9; cf. Isa 49:14 ff., Isa 51:16 f., Isa 52:1 ff. Isa 52:7 ff. That there was an actual population in the ruined city during the Exile is of course not to be inferred from this figure. There are two standing personifications of Israel in this prophecy, the other being the “Servant of the Lord.” These, however, are not interchangeable; Zion represents the nation on its receptive side; she is the mother of the people, the recipient of the blessings of salvation; while the Servant represents the historic Israel, past, present and future, in its religious aspect, with a Divine mission to fulfil for humanity.
her warfare is accomplished ] The word for “warfare” is that rendered “appointed time” in A.V. of Job 7:1; Job 14:14. It means properly a term of military service; then figuratively any period of irksome toil or endurance which a man longs to reach the end of; such as life itself had become to Job. The reference here is of course to the Exile. Render: time of service (R.V. marg.).
her iniquity (better, her guilt) is pardoned ] The expression for pardon is rare. The verb commonly means “to be pleased with”; in a few places it means (as here) “to pay off a debt to the satisfaction of the creditor” (see Lev 26:34; Lev 26:41; Lev 26:43, and cf. 2Ch 36:21). For the idea see ch. Isa 50:1.
for she hath received double ] i.e. “double penalty for her sins” (cf. Jer 16:18; Jer 17:18; Rev 18:6), not “(she shall receive) double favour for her previous punishment.” It is difficult to say whether the clause is subordinate to the two preceding (as in A.V.) or co-ordinate with them, as in R.V. (reading that instead of for). The idea that Jerusalem’s punishment had been greater than her sin required is not to be pressed theologically; but the idea that Jehovah’s penal purpose can be satisfied by a temporary chastisement is of the essence of the O.T. notion of forgiveness. It must be remembered, however, that in the view of this prophet, Israel includes the Servant of Jehovah, and the unmerited sufferings of the Servant form the atoning element in the punishment which has fallen on the nation as a whole (ch. 53).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Speak ye comfortably – Hebrew, al–leb as in the margin, To the heart. The heart is the seat of the affections. It is there that sorrow and joy are felt. We are oppressed there with grief, and we speak familiarly of being pained at the heart and of being of a glad or merry heart. To speak to the heart, is to speak in such a way as to remove the troubles of the heart; to furnish consolation, and joy. It means that they were not merely to urge such topics as should convince the understanding, but such also as should be adopted to minister consolation to the heart. So the word is used in Gen 34:3 : And his soul clave unto Dinah – and he loved the damsel, and spake kindly (Hebrew, to the heart) of the damsel; Gen 50:21 : And he comforted them, and spoke kindly unto them (Hebrew, to their hearts); see also 2Ch 32:6.
To Jerusalem – The direction is not merely to speak to the people in Babylon, but also to comfort Jerusalem itself lying in ruins. The general direction is, therefore, that the entire series of topics of consolation should be adduced – the people were to return from their bondage, and Jerusalem was to be rebuilt, and the worship of God to be restored.
And cry unto her – In the manner of a crier; or one making public and loud proclamation (compare Isa 40:3, Isa 40:9). Jerusalem is here personified. She is addressed as in ruins, and as about to be rebuilt, and as capable of consolation from this promise.
That her warfare is accomplished – Septuagint, That her humiliation ( tapeinosis) is accomplished. The Hebrew word ( tsaba’, warfare) properly means an army or host (compare the note at Isa 1:9), and is usually applied to an army going forth to war, or marshalled for battle 2Sa 8:16; 2Sa 10:7. It is then used to denote an appointed time of service; the discharge of a duty similar to an enlistment, and is applied to the services of the Levites in the tabernacle Num 4:28 : All that enter in to perform the service (Hebrew, to war the warfare), to do the work in the tabernacle of the congregation. Compare Num 8:24-25. Hence, it is applied to human life contemplated as a warfare, or enlistment, involving hard service and calamity; an enlistment from which there is to be a discharge by death.
Is there not a set time (Hebrew, a warfare) to man upon earth?
Are not his days as the days of an hireling?
Job 7:1
But if a man die – shall he indeed live again?
All the days of my appointed time (Hebrew, my warfare) will I wait,
Till my change come.
Job 14:14
Compare Dan 10:1. The word then means hard service, such as soldiers endure; an appointed time which they are to serve; an enlistment involving hardships, toil, privation, danger, calamity. In this sense it is applied hero to Jerusalem – to the trials, calamities, desolations to which she was subjected for her sins, and which were to endure a definite and fixed time – like the enlistment of an army. That time was now coming to an end, and to be succeeded by a release, or discharge. Vitringa, who supposes that this refers primarily and solely to the times of the Messiah, regards this as meaning that the definite time of the legal economy, a time of toil, and of vexatious and troublesome ceremonies, was about to end by the coming of the Messiah. But the more correct interpretation is, probably, that which supposes that there was a primary reference to the long and painful captivity of the Jews, in Babylon.
That her iniquity – The iniquity or sin here referred to, is that long series of acts of rebellion, corruption, and idolatry, with which the Jewish people had been chargeable, and which had rendered their captivity necessary. As a nation, that sin was now expiated, or removed by their protracted punishment in Babylon. It was a sufficient expression of the divine displeasure at the national offences, and God was satisfied ( nretsah) with it, and could consistently restore them to their land, and to their former privileges. The whole language here has respect to national, and not to individual offences.
Is pardoned – Vulgate, Dimissa est iniquitas illius. Septuagint, Lelutai autes he hamartia – Her sin is loosed, dissolved, remitted. The word pardon does not quite express the meaning of the word in the original ( nretsah). The word ratsah properly means to delight in any person or thing; to take pleasure in; then to receive graciously or favorably; to delight in sacrifices and offerings Job 33:26; Psa 51:18; Eze 20:40; and, in the Hiphil conjugation, satisfy, or pay to off, that is, to cause to be satisfied, or pleased; and then in Hophal, to be satisfied, to be paid off, to be pleased or satisfied with an expiation, or with an atonement for sins, so as to delight in the person who makes it. Here it means not strictly to pardon, but it means that they had endured the national punishment which God saw to be necessary; they had served out the long and painful enlistment which he had appointed, and now he was satisfied, and took delight in restoring them to their own land. It does not refer to the pardon of people in consequence of the atonement made by the Lord Jesus; but it may be used as an illustration of that, when God is satisfied with that atonement; and when he has pleasure or delight in setting the soul free from the bondage of sin, and admitting the sinner to his favor – as he had delight here in restoring his people to their own land.
For she hath received – Jerusalem had now been desolate for almost seventy years, on the supposition that this relates to the period near the close of the exile, and that was regarded as an ample or full expression of what she ought to suffer for her national offences.
Of the Lords hand – From the hand, or by the agency of Yahweh. Whoever were the instruments, her sufferings were to be regarded as his appointment.
Double for all her sins – The word rendered double ( kipelayim) is the dual form from kepel, a doubling, and occurs in Job 41:13 :
Who will rip up the covering of his armor?
Against the doubling of his nostrils who will advance?
Good
And in Job 11:6 :
And that he would unfold to them the secrets of wisdom.
That they are double to that which is;
That is, there are double-folds to Gods wisdom, or the wisdom of of God is complicated, inexplicabIe (Gesenius). The word in Job means conduplications, folds, complications, mazes, intricacies (Good). Here the word has doubtless its usual and proper meaning, and denotes double, twice as much; and the expression may denote that God had inflicted on them double that which had been usually inflicted on rebellious nations, or on the nation, before for its sins. Or the word may be used to denote abundance, and the prophet may design to teach that they had been amply, or abundantly punished for their crimes. That is, says Grotius, as much as God judged to be sufficient. Double, here, says Calvin, is to be received for large and abundant. Some have supposed (see Rosenmuller, who approves of this interpretation) that the word sins here means the punishment of sins, and that the word double refers to the mercies or favors which they were about to receive, or which God had purposed to confer on them. So Lowth understands it; and renders the word laqechah shall receive (in the future):
That she shall receive at the hand of Yahweh
(Blessings) double to the punishment of all her sins.
But though it was true that their favors on their return, in the hope of the Messiah, and in their renovated privileges, would be far more numerous than their sufferings had been, yet this does not so well suit the connection, where the prophet is giving a reason why they should be released from their bondage, and restored to the privileges of their own land. That reason manifestly is, that they had suffered what was regarded by Yahweh as an ample expression of his displeasure for their national offences. It does not refer to individual sinners; nor to any power which they have to make atonement for their sins; nor does it refer to the atonement made by the Messiah. But it may be remarked, by the way, that in the sufferings of the Redeemer there has been ample satisfaction for the sins of his people. The Chaldee interpreter understands this as Rosenmuller does, that the word double refers to, the mercies which they had received: Because she has received a cup of consolation from the presence of the Lord, as if ( ke‘ilu) she had been smitten twofold for all her sins.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Isa 40:2
Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem
Voices that speak to the heart
This is one characteristic of the voices that reach us from God: they speak home to the heart (R.., marg.). The phrase in the Hebrew is the ordinary expression for wooing, and describes the attitude of the suppliant lover endeavouring to woo a maidens heart. Love can detect love.
I. THE VOICE OF FORGIVENESS. The first need of the soul is forgiveness. It can endure suffering; and if that suffering, like the Jewish exile, has been caused by its own follies and sins, it will meekly bow beneath it, saying with Eli, under similar circumstances, It is the Lord; let Him do what seemeth good to Him. But the sense of being unforgiven! This bitterness of heart for sin is the first symptom of returning life! And before God can enter upon His great work of salvation, before He can clear away the debris and restore the ruined temple, before He can reproduce His image, it is needful to assure the penitent and believing soul that its time of service is accomplished, that its iniquity is pardoned. In dealing with the question of sin and its results, let us always distinguish between its penal and natural consequences. The distinction comes out clearly in the ease of drunkenness or criminal violence. Society steps in and inflicts the penalties of the fine, the prison, or the lash; but in addition to these, there is the aching head, the trembling hand, the shattered nervous system. So in respect to all sin. The natural consequences remain. David was forgiven, but the sword never left his house. The drunkard, the dissolute, the passionate, may be pardoned, and yet have to reap as they sowed. The consequences of forgiven sin may be greatly sanctified; the Marah waters cured by the tree of the Cross–yet they must be patiently and inevitably endured. It was thus that Jerusalem was suffering, when these dulcet notes reached her. The backsliding and rebellious people were doomed to serve their appointed time and captivity, and suffer the natural and inevitable results of apostasy. Hence the double comfort of this first announcement.
II. THE VOICE OF DELIVERANCE. Between Babylon and Palestine lay a great desert of more than thirty days journey. But the natural difficulties that seemed to make the idea of return chimerical, were small compared with those that arose from other circumstances. The captives were held by as proud a monarchy as that which refused to let their fathers go from the brick-kilns of Egypt. Mountains arose in ranges between them and freedom, and valleys interposed their yawning gulfs. But when God arises to deliver His people who cry day and night unto Him, mountains swing back, as did the iron gate before Peter; valleys lift their hollows into level plains; crooked things become straight, and rough places smooth.
III. THE VOICES OF DECAY AND IMMORTAL STRENGTH. As mans soul is still, and becomes able to distinguish the voices that speak around him in that eternal world to which he, not less than the unseen speakers, belongs, it hears first and oftenest the lament of the angels over the transcience of human life and glory. In a stillness, in which the taking of the breath is hushed, the soul listens to their conversation as they speak together. Cry, says one watcher to another. What shall I cry? is the instant inquiry. There is, continues the first, but one sentiment suggested by the aspect of the world of men. All flesh is grass, and all its beauty like the wild flowers of the meadow-lands, blasted by the breath of the east wind, or lying in swathes beneath the reapers scythe. The words meet with a deep response in the heart of each thoughtful man. But listen further to the voices of the heavenly watchers. The failure of man shall not frustrate the Divine purpose. The Word of the Lord shall stand for ever.
IV. VOICES TO HERALD THE SHEPHERD-KING. The Old Version and the margin of the R.V. are, perhaps, preferable to the R.V. Zion, the grey fortress of Jerusalem, is bidden to climb the highest mountain within reach, and to lift up her voice in fearless strength, announcing to the cities of Judah lying around in ruins that God was on His way to restore them. Say unto the cities, Behold your God! Behold the Lord God will come. All eyes are turned to behold the entrance on the scene of the Lord God, especially as it has been announced that He will come as a mighty one. But, lo! a Shepherd conducts His flock with leisurely steps across the desert sands, gathering the lambs with His arm, and carrying them in His bosom, and gently leading those that give suck. It is as when, in after centuries, the beloved apostle was taught to expect the Lion of the tribe of Judah, and, lo! in the midst of the throne stood a Lamb as it had been slain. Do not be afraid of God. He has a shepherds heart and skill. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
God the Comforter of His people
The skill of a physician is shown, in the first place, in selecting out of many diseases that under which his patient suffers; and, in the second place, in choosing, out of many remedies, that which is most likely to effect his cure. There is as great variety in the diseases of the soul as in those of the body. And if there be this variety in spiritual diseases, and this variety of remedy, then evidently, in ministering to a mixed people, the preacher of Christianity will have to decide in each separate case what is the precise form of sickness, and what the exact medicine best adapted to its cure. Where the soul is utterly insensible to the truths of religion, there must not be the same process as where the conscience is busy in remonstrance. There are spiritual patients with whom we must try argument; but there are others with whom argument would be altogether out of place, whose disquieted minds totally incapacitate them for any process of reasoning; who require the cordials of the Gospel, that they may be strengthened for the trials and endurances of life. There is the lowering medicine for the over-sanguine and presumptuous; and there is the stimulating for the timid and mistrustful.
I. In our text, there is a specification of one large class of medicine; and therefore, by inference, ONE LARGE CLASS OF SICKNESS. Comfort is the staple of the prescription. And what was the condition of these patients? We may ascertain this from the subsequent words, Cry unto her, that her warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received of the Lords hands double for all her sins. Here evidently the condition of Jerusalem is one of distress and anxiety and distraction; and this accords most exactly with a passage in the Psalms, and with which we shall connect our text–In the multitude of my thoughts within me, Thy comforts delight my soul. Here there is the same medicine–comfort; but you have the disease more clearly defined–a multitude of thoughts. Bishop Austins version is, The multitude of my anxieties within me; whilst the representation in the original Hebrew would seem that of a man involved in a labyrinth, from whose intricacies there was no way of escape. All this agrees precisely with the case of Jerusalem in the text. And what cause of distressing anxiety would there be whilst there was warfare unfinished, and sin unforgiven! A multitude of thoughts is a very common symptom; but in different patients it requires very different medicines. A man might be a man after Gods own heart, and yet subject to the invasion of a crowd of anxieties. It is not uncommon for religious persons to erect standards of excellence, failing to reach which they become uneasy and doubtful as to their spiritual state. Reading the promises of the Bible, which speak of the righteous as kept in perfect peace, which breathe tranquillity, abstraction from earthly cares and foretastes of the blessedness of heaven, they conclude that what they ought to experience is perfect serenity of mind; and when they often experience distracting anxieties which the spirit is unable to throw off altogether, and when in times of approaching in prayer the Lord God of heaven and earth, they find their attention broken, then they will add to every other grief a worse grief than all–they will suspect their own sincerity in religion. And never can it be a part of our business to lessen the extent of what is blameworthy, or to endeavour to persuade the righteous that freedom from anxiety is not a privilege to be sought for, or that the concentration of the whole soul is not to be attempted, and failure therein not bitterly lamented. But we know that amid the turmoil of this busy world there will often be such an invasion of the altar of the Lord as when the birds came down on Abrahams sacrifice. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak. And whilst we could not wish men to regard their infirmities as sufficient excuses, or to be content with imperfection, as though unavoidable; still, where there is the honest endeavour to stay the mind on God, and abstract it from earth, we may tell them that piety may consist with anxiety, and sincerity of prayer with a multitude of thoughts. God is speaking to those who were sorely distracted, and yet He still calls them My people. It is not every failure which should fill you with apprehension as to your state before God.
So wonderfully are we made, so many are the inlets into the mind, so great are the facilities with which evil angels can ply their suggestions, so difficult, moreover, is it to keep that attention to worldly business which is required from us as members of society, from being deformed by that carefulness which is forbidden us as members of Christs Church; that, indeed, it were vain to hope, however it be right to desire, that anxiety shall never harass us in a world that teems with trouble. So far from being necessarily a cause of despair or despondency, the Christian may rise superior to all these intruders, and prove that they do but heighten the blessedness of the blessing, though invaded by the influence of earth. God speaks to those as still His people who are wearied and worn down with warfare and toil; and in place of speaking to them reproachfully He has only soothing things to utter–Comfort ye, etc.
II. Our latter observations have somewhat trenched on THE CHARACTER OF THE MEDICINE which should be tried when the disease is a multitude of thoughts; but we must now examine with attention, and endeavour to determine its faithfulness and its efficiency. The case is that of a righteous man on whom cares and sorrows press with great weight; and whose mind is torn with anxieties and thronged by a crowd of restless intruders distracting him even in his communings with God. Now, the very disease under which this man labours incapacitates him in a great measure for any process of argument. His distracted mind is quite unfitted for that calm and searching inquiry which is required into the matter of the evidences of Christianity for strictly convincing him of the inspiration of Scripture. His mind is evidently unfitted for duly considering, and examining with that singleness of purpose which is demanded by their solemnity, mysteriousness, and importance such truths as those of the Trinity, the Incarnation, and the Atonement. Ask ye what these comforts are? There are the rich assurances of Gods forgiving love; there are the gracious declarations of His everlasting purpose of preserving to the end those whom He has chosen in Christ; there are the multiplied promises which make to the eye of faith the page of Scripture one sheet of burning brightness, always presenting most radiantly what is most suited to the necessity. There are the foretastes of immortality. You may without sinfulness and merely through infirmity be invaded and harassed by a multitude of thoughts. But the evil is that when thus invaded and harassed the Christian is apt to attempt a critical examination of his spiritual state, to encourage doubts as to his acceptance with God, and to try and satisfy himself by some process of reasoning as to whether he has indeed believed unto the saving of his soul, whereas his very state is one which unfits him for reasoning, for sitting in judgment on himself, and delivering an accurate verdict. He is sick, and requires Gods comfort.
III. The comforting message is to be delivered to Jerusalem, and annexed is a statement of her warfare being accomplished; and if you connect with this the exclamation of St. Paul–I have fought the good fight, I have finished my course, you will see that we make no far-fetched application of the text, if we affirm it as SPECIALLY APPROPRIATE ON THE APPROACH OF THE LAST ENEMY, DEATH. Never is it likely that there will be a more tumultuous gathering of conflicting emotions than when the mind fixes itself on approaching death. It is here that the power of all mere human resources must eventually fail. Christianity furnishes an abundance of what is needed for allaying the fear of death, and soothing mans passage to the tomb. (H. Mevill, B. D.)
Her warfare is accomplished
The Christians warfare
The acceptableness of any announcement will depend very much upon the state of mind and feeling in which we are found in respect to the subject of such announcement. Go to the soldier, wearied with a long campaign, and many a hazardous engagement, longing for a sight of his beloved home–to him how welcome will be the announcement, Thy warfare is accomplished! It was on this principle that the prophet Isaiah was directed to take a message of consolation to the ancient people of God. The language of the text may, without any impropriety, be applied to the termination of any state of anxiety, hardship, and grief.
I. THE LIFE OF THE TRUE BELIEVER IS A WARFARE. Frequently is it represented to us in the Holy Scripture by this form of military phraseology. Hence, says the apostle, Fight the good fight of faith; and, writing to Timothy, That by these thou mightest war a good warfare; I have fought a good fight, etc.
1. The great principle of the conflict is faith, founded and implanted in the mind by a super-natural agency. No man will ever in a Christian sense contend, until he is united by a living faith to Jesus, the Son of God: for faith acquaints him with his spiritual enemies; faith is the principle of the new life which puts itself into an attitude of resistance against all that is hostile to itself. This is the victory that over-cometh the world, even our faith. When a man is slumbering in his sin, nothing is further from his thoughts than to maintain a spiritual conflict with invisible, spiritual existences; but, under the influence of faith, he will find he is surrounded by a legion of foes. He looks within, and there he finds the corruption of fallen nature. Besides the corruption of an evil nature, there are the powers of darkness. The world, even in its lawful form, is a very serious enemy to our spiritual progress and our spiritual peace.
2. This contention will continue as long as life shall last.
II. THE HOUR OF DEATH WITNESSES THE ACCOMPLISHMENT OF THIS WARFARE.
1. Death is the instrumental means of separating us from our connection with the present evil world; it strikes at once a line of demarcation, which throws us beyond the reach of all the elements of this present sensible life. He upon whom death has performed his solemn office, has no further interest in the possessions, the endearments, the gains, the business, the pleasures, and the satisfactions of this vain world.
2. Then, death terminates the strife of sin.
3. Death confesses that the believer is a conqueror over himself, and fields the palm of victory at the moment when he inflicts the blow (1Co 15:55-57).
III. THE CONSOLING AND EXHILARATING QUALITIES OF THIS BLESSED CONSUMMATION.
1. When the warfare ends, the rest begins.
2. This state of rest is also a state of peculiar and inexpressible delight. It is something more than rest, as implying a cessation from toil and from contention; it is a joyful rest. Think of the place of rest into which the departed spirits of the just are received. They are where Christ is; they behold His glory. And then, consider the society to which the ransomed spirits of the just are admitted. Think of the employments to which they are advanced. They serve God day and night in His temple, and His name is in their foreheads.
3. This felicity is evermore increasing.
4. This felicity will be for ever and ever. So shall we ever be with the Lord. (G. Clayton.)
Undeserved grace
Fulfilled is her warfare, absolved her guilt, received hath she of Jehovahs hand double for all her sins. The very grammar here is eloquent of grace. The emphasis lies on the three predicates, which ought to stand in translation, as they do in the original, at the beginning of each clause. Prominence is given, not to the warfare, nor to the guilt, nor to the sins, but to this, that accomplished is the warfare, absolved the guilt, sufficiently expiated the sins. It is a great At Last which these clauses peal forth; but an At Last whose tone is not so much inevitableness as undeserved grace. (Prof. G. A. Smith, D. D.)
Grace masked by grace
How full of pity God is, to take so much account of the sufferings sinners have brought upon themselves! How full of grace to reckon those sufferings double the sins that had earned them! It is, as when we have seen gracious men make us a free gift, and in their courtesy insist that we have worked for it. It is grace masked by grace. (Prof. G. A. Smith, D. D.)
Double for all her sins
Double for all her sins
It is not to be pressed arithmetically, in which case God would appear over-righteous, and therefore unrighteous. (F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 2. Double for all her sins – “Blessings double to the punishment.”] It does not seem reconcilable to our notions of the Divine justice, which always punishes less than our iniquities deserve, to suppose that God had punished the sins of the Jews in double proportion; and it is more agreeable to the tenor of this consolatory message to understand it as a promise of ample recompense for the effects of past displeasure, on the reconciliation of God to his returning people. To express this sense of the passage, which the words of the original will very well bear, it was necessary to add a word or two in the version to supply the elliptical expression of the Hebrew. Compare Isa 61:7; Job 42:10; Zec 9:12. chattaah signifies punishment for sin, La 3:39; Zec 14:19. But Kimchi says, “Double here means the two captivities and emigrations suffered by the Israelites. The first, the Babylonish captivity; the second, that which they now endure.” This is not a bad conjecture.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Cry unto her; proclaim it in my name.
Her warfare; the time of her servitude, and captivity, and misery.
Her iniquity is pardoned; I am reconciled to her; I will not impute sin to her, to punish her any longer for it.
Double for all her sins; not twice as much as her sins deserved, for she herself confessed the contrary, Ezr 9:13; Lam 3:22; but abundantly enough to answer Gods design in this chastisement, which was to humble and reform them, and to warn others by their example. Double is oft put for abundantly, as Isa 61:7; Jer 16:18; 17:18. God here speaks of himself after the manner of men, and compareth himself to a tender-hearted father, who when he hath corrected his child for his misdemeanour, relenteth and repenteth of his severity, and casteth his rod away.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
2. comfortablyliterally, “tothe heart”; not merely to the intellect.
JerusalemJerusalemthough then in ruins, regarded by God as about to be rebuilt; herpeople are chiefly meant, but the city is personified.
crypublicly andemphatically as a herald cries aloud (Isa40:3).
warfareor, theappointed time of her misery (Job7:1, Margin; Job 14:14;Dan 10:1). The ulterior andMessianic reference probably is the definite time when thelegal economy of burdensome rites is at an end (Gal 4:3;Gal 4:4).
pardonedThe Hebrewexpresses that her iniquity is so expiated that God nowdelights in restoring her.
double for all her sinsThiscan only, in a very restricted sense, hold good of Judah’srestoration after the first captivity. For how can it be said her”warfare was accomplished,” when as yet the galling yoke ofAntiochus and also of Rome was before them? The “double for hersins” must refer to the twofold captivity, the Assyrian and theRoman; at the coming close of this latter dispersion, and then only,can her “iniquity” be said to be “pardoned,” orfully expiated [HOUBIGANT].It does not mean double as much as she deserved, but amplepunishment in her twofold captivity. Messiah is the antitypicalIsrael (compare Mat 2:15;Hos 11:1). He indeed has”received” of sufferings amply more than enough toexpiate “for our sins” (Rom 5:15;Rom 5:17). Otherwise (cry untoher) “that she shall receive (blessings) of theLord’s hand double to the punishment of all her sins” (so”sin” is used, Zec14:19, Margin) [LOWTH].The English Version is simpler.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her,…. Or, “speak to or according to the heart of Jerusalem h”; to her very heart, what will be a cordial to her, very acceptable, grateful, and comfortable; and let it be proclaimed aloud, that she may hear and understand it. By “Jerusalem” is meant the Gospel church, and the true members of it. Aben Ezra interprets it of the congregation of Israel; see Heb 12:22:
that her warfare is accomplished; this life is a warfare; saints have many enemies to engage with, sin, Satan, and the world; many battles to fight, a great fight of afflictions, and the good fight of faith: this is “accomplished”, or “filled up i”; not that it is at an end before this life is, while that lasts there will be a continual conflict; yet all enemies are now conquered by Christ, and in a short time will be under the feet of his people; the Captain of their salvation, who has got the victory, is gone before them; the crown is laid up for them, and is sure unto them. Some interpret it, as Aben Ezra, Kimchi, and Ben Melech, “her set or appointed time k”; and compare it with Job 7:1, and may be understood either of the time of deliverance from captivity: so the Targum,
“that her captivity by the people is filled up:”
or of the time of the Messiah’s coming, the fulness of time, when he should appear, afterwards prophesied of; or of the servitude and bondage of the law being at an end, and of all the fatigue, labour, and trouble of that dispensation; and of the Gospel dispensation taking place: it follows,
that her iniquity is pardoned; which is God’s act, flows from his free grace, is obtained by the blood of Christ, is full and complete, and yields great relief and comfort to guilty minds: or “is accepted” l; that is, the punishment of it as bore by her surety; see Le 26:43. The allusion is to the sacrifices being accepted for the atonement of sin, Le 1:4, and may have respect here to the acceptation of Christ’s sacrifice, for the expiation of the sins of his people. Jarchi interprets the word “appeased”; and so it may be applied to the reconciliation for sin made by the blood of Christ. The Targum understands it of forgiveness, as we do:
for she hath received of the Lord’s hand double for all her sins; which may be understood either of a sufficiency of chastisements for sin; though they are not more, but less, than are deserved, yet are as much as their heavenly Father, in his great tenderness and compassion, thinks are enough; and though they are in measure, and do not exceed, yet are in large measure often, at least in their own apprehension: or else of the large and copious blessings of grace and goodness received, instead of punishment for sins, that might be expected: or rather at the complete satisfaction made by Christ for her sins, and of her receiving at the Lord’s hands, in her surety, full punishment for them; not that more was required than was due, but that ample satisfaction was made, and, being infinite, fully answers the demerit of sin; and this being in the room and stead of God’s people, clears them, and yields comfort to them.
h , Sept. “loquimini ad cor”, V. L. Pagninus, Montanus, Vatablus, Vitringa; “secundum cor”, Calvin. i “completa est militia ejus”, Pagninus, Montanus. k “Tempus praefinitum”, Junius & Tremellius. l “acccpta est”, Piscator, Forerius.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The summons is now repeated with still greater emphasis, the substance of the consoling proclamation being also given. “Speak ye to the heart of Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her affliction is ended, that her debt is paid, that she has received from the hand of Jehovah double for all her sins.” The holy city is thought of here in connection with the population belonging to it. (to speak to the heart) is an expression applied in Gen 34:3 and Jdg 19:3 to words adapted to win the heart; in Gen 50:21, to the words used by Joseph to inspire his brethren with confidence; whilst here it is used in precisely the same sense as in Hos 2:16, and possibly not without a reminiscence of this earlier prophecy. (to call to a person) is applied to a prophetic announcement made to a person, as in Jer 7:27; Zec 1:4. The announcement to be made to Jerusalem is then introduced with , , which serves as the introduction to either an indirect or a direct address (Ges. 155, 1, e). (1.) Her affliction has become full, and therefore has come to an end. , military service, then feudal service, and hardship generally (Job 7:1); here it applies to the captivity or exile – that unsheltered bivouac, as it were, of the people who had bee transported into a foreign land, and were living there in bondage, restlessness, and insecurity. (2.) Her iniquity is atoned for, and the justice of God is satisfied: nirtsah , which generally denotes a satisfactory reception, is used here in the sense of meeting with a satisfactory payment, like in Lev 26:41, Lev 26:43, to pay off the debt of sin by enduring the punishment of sin. (3.) The third clause repeats the substance of the previous ones with greater emphasis and in a fuller tone: Jerusalem has already suffered fully for her sins. In direct opposition to , which cannot, when connected with two actual perfects as it is here, be take as a perfect used to indicate the certainty of some future occurrence, Gesenius, Hitzig, Ewald, Umbreit, Stier, and Hahn suppose kiphlayim to refer to the double favour that Jerusalem was about to receive (like m ishneh in Isa 61:7, and possibly borrowed from Isaiah in Zec 9:12), instead of to the double punishment which Jerusalem had endured (like mishneh in Jer 16:18). It is not to be taken, however, in a judicial sense; in which case God would appear over-rigid, and therefore unjust. Jerusalem had not suffered more than its sins had deserved; but the compassion of God regarded what His justice had been obliged to inflict upon Jerusalem as superabundant. This compassion also expresses itself in the words “for all” ( b e khol , c. Beth pretii): there is nothing left for further punishment. The turning-point from wrath to love has arrived. The wrath has gone forth in double measure. With what intensity, therefore, will the love break forth, which has been so long restrained!
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
2. Speak ye according to the heart of Jerusalem. Here God commands his servants the prophets, and lays down the message which he wishes them to deliver publicly, when believers shall be called to change their strain from mourning to joy. And yet he does not exhort and encourage them to the cheerful and courageous discharge of their office, so much as he conveys to the minds of believers an assured hope that they may patiently endure the irksomeness of delay, till the prophets appear with this glad and delightful message. To speak to the heart (107) is nothing else than “to speak according to the wish or sentiment of the mind;” for our heart abhors or recoils if any sad intelligence is communicated, but eagerly receives, or rather runs to meet, whatever is agreeable. Now, in consequence of the people having been apparently rejected, nothing could be more agreeable than a reconciliation (108) which should blot out all offenses. By a figure of speech in which a part is taken for the whole, Jerusalem, as is well known, denotes the Church.
And cry to her. The word cry means that the promise of this grace will be open and manifest, so as to resound in the ears of all and be understood; for if prophets only muttered or spoke indistinctly, the belief of this consolation would be doubtful or weak, but now that they publish it boldly and with open mouth, all doubts are removed.
That her warfare is accomplished. This is the desirable message, that the Lord determines to put an end to the warfare of his people. I consider כי (ki) to be used for introducing an explanation. Some think that צבאה, (tzebaahh,) which we have translated “her warfare,” simply denotes “time,” as if it had been said, “her time is accomplished.” (109) Others think that it expresses the time of visitation, but this is incorrect; for among the Hebrews it literally denotes a time previously appointed and set apart for lawful work or labor. (Num 4:23.) But here unquestionably the metaphor is taken from the discharge of soldiers; for it means that the end and issue of their vexations is at hand, and that God does not wish to harass his people continually, but to set a limit to their afflictions. He therefore compares the time of the captivity in Babylon to a righteous warfare, at the end of which the soldiers, having obtained an honorable discharge, will return home to enjoy peace and quietness.
That her iniquity is pardoned. This means that God is so gracious to them that he is unwilling to treat them with the utmost severity. These words, therefore, assign a reason; for, as physicians, in curing diseases, first remove the causes from which diseases arise, so does the Lord deal with us. The scourges by which he chastises us proceed from our sins; and therefore, that he may cease to strike, he must first pardon us; and consequently, he says that there will be an end of punishments, because he no longer imputes sin. Others think that עונה (gnavonahh) means “her misery,” and that it denotes that her misery is ended. This meaning also is highly appropriate, and thus the Prophet will make the same announcement in two ways; for to finish her warfare, and to put an end to her miseries, mean the same thing. Yet we must hold this principle, that God ceases from inflicting punishment when he is appeased, so that pardon and the forgiveness of sins always come first in order, as the cause. But the word נרצה (nirtzah) demands, in my opinion, the former meaning; as if he had said, that God has been appeased in such a manner that, having pardoned and forgiven their sins, he is ready to enter again into a state of favor with his people.
Double for all her sins. This passage is explained in two ways. Some say that the people, having deserved a double punishment, have obtained a double favor; and others, that they have received enough of punishment, because God is unwilling to exact more. The former interpretation, though it contains an excellent and profitable doctrine, does not agree with the text, and must therefore be set aside; and it is evident that the Prophet means nothing else than that God is abundantly satisfied with the miseries which have befallen his Church. I could have wished, therefore, that they who have attacked Jerome and other supporters of this interpretation, had been more moderate; for the natural meaning belongs to this interpretation, and not to the more ingenious one, that the Lord repays double favor for their sins. The general meaning is, that God is unwilling to inflict more severe or more lengthened punishment on his people, because, through his fatherly kindness, he is in some sense displeased with the severity.
Here the word double denotes “large and abundant.” It must not be imagined that the punishments were greater than the offenses, or equal to them; for we ought to abhor the blasphemy of those who accuse God of cruelty, as if he inflicted on men excessively severe punishment; for what punishment could be inflicted that was sufficiently severe even for the smallest offense? This must therefore relate to the mercy of God, who, by setting a limit to the chastisements, testifies that he is unwilling to punish them any more or longer, as if he were abundantly satisfied with what had gone before, though that nation deserved far severer chastisements. God sustains the character of a Father who, while he compassionates his children, is led, not without reluctance, to exercise severity, and thus willingly bends his mind to grant forgiveness.
(107) “ Selon le coeur;” “according to the heart.” Our author employs both “ secundum cor “ and “ ad cor.” — Ed.
(108) “ La reconciliation avec Dieu.” “The reconciliation with God.”
(109) Que nons avons traduit Guerre, pour “le temps,” comme s’il estoit dit Son temps est accompli.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(2) Speak ye comfortably . . .Literally, Speak ye to the heart. The command is addressed to the prophets whom Isaiah contemplates as working towards the close of the exile, and carrying on his work. In Hag. 1:13, Hag. 2:9, and Zec. 1:13; Zec. 2:5-10; Zec. 9:9-12, we may rightly trace the influence of the words as working out their own fulfilment.
That her warfare is accomplished.The time of war, with all its suffering, becomes the symbol of sufferings apart from actual war. The exile was one long campaign with enemies who were worse than the Babylonian conquerors. In Job. 7:1; Job. 14:14, the word is applied (rendered by appointed time) to the battle of life from its beginning to its end. This, too, may be noted as one of the many parallelisms between Isaiah and Job.
That her iniquity is pardoned.Strictly, as in Lev. 26:41; Lev. 26:43, is paid off, or accepted. The word implies not exemption from punishment, but the fact that the punishment had been accepted, and had done its work.
She hath received of the Lords hand . . .Primarily, the thought is that Jerusalem has suffered a more than sufficient penalty. (Comp. Exo. 22:9; Rev. 18:6.) This seems more in harmony with the context than the view which takes the meaning that Jerusalem shall receive a double measure of grace and favour. In the long run, however, the one meaning does not exclude the other. It is the mercy of Jehovah which reckons the punishment sufficient, because it has been accepted (Lev. 26:41), and has done its work. (Comp. Jer. 16:18.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
2. Speak comfortably That is, carry the message in the tenderest way to the very heart. This is a thrice-told charge, rendering the meaning still more intense.
Jerusalem Another name for God’s beloved Zion or people. Wherever they are the prophet is to give them cheer. Officially sent of God, he has declared that her warfare ( , tsaba,) or the allotted time of her captivity is accomplished. Here it is service and hardship implied in exile, of which God’s people have a double suffering, and for which there shall be provided twofold comfort in the form of pardon.
Delitzsch calls their trouble “that unsheltered bivouac, as it were, of the people who had been transported into a foreign land, and were living there in bondage, restlessness, and insecurity.” See Job 7:5; Job 14:14; and Dan 10:1.
No doubt there is a Messianic idea underneath here that of a gloriously better day at hand; and if allusion is also made, as some think, to a past ritualistic hard life in the word “warfare,” above, then the deliverance by Messiah is the freedom of the Gospel, which thought in the prophet’s mind underlies the Babylonian deliverance.
These verses (one and two) open up the subject of the prophecies which now follow to the end of the book, and the two verses are the key words to them all.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Isa 40:2 Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received of the LORD’S hand double for all her sins.
Ver. 2. Speak ye comfortably. ] Speak to the heart, as Gen 34:3 Hos 2:14 . Cheer her up, speak to her with utmost earnestness, that your words may work upon her and stick-by her; do it solidly, not frigidly.
That her warfare is accomplished.
That her iniquity is pardoned.
That she hath received of the Lord’s hand double,] i.e., Abundantly and in a large measure, satis superque, so much as to her merciful Father seemeth over and above, more than enough. “She hath received double for all her sins”: and yet death is the just hire of the least sin. Rom 6:23 But this is the language of God’s compassions rolled together and kindled into repentings; Jerusalem herself was of another judgment. Ezr 9:13 “Our God hath punished us less than our sins,” and yet he reckoneth that we “fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ.” Col 1:24
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
comfortably to = to the heart of: i.e. affectionately. Compare Gen 34:3; Gen 50:21. Jdg 19:3. Hos 2:14.
cry = proclaim. Note the same word, and truth, in Isa 40:3.
warfare = hard service or forced service.
iniquity. Hebrew. avah. App-44.
the Lord. Hebrew. Jehovah. App-4.
double = in full. Put by Figure of speech Metonymy (of Subject), for that which is complete, thorough, ample. See Isa 61:7. Gen 43:22. Job 11:6; Job 41:13. Jer 16:18; Jer 17:18. Zec 9:12. 1Ti 5:17. Compare Job 42:10. Gal 1:6, Gal 1:7-9.
sins. Hebrew. chata. App-44.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
comfortably: Heb. to the heart, Gen 34:3, 2Ch 30:22, Hos 2:14, *marg.
warfare: or, appointed time, Psa 102:13-28, Son 2:11-13, Jer 29:11, Dan 9:2, Dan 9:24-27, Dan 11:35, Dan 12:4, Dan 12:9, Hab 2:3, Act 1:7, Gal 4:4, Rev 6:10, Rev 6:11, Rev 11:15-18
that her iniquity: Isa 12:1, Isa 33:24, Isa 43:25, Isa 44:22, Isa 61:7, Psa 32:1, Jer 31:33, Jer 31:34, Jer 33:8, Jer 33:9, 1Co 6:9-11
double: Isa 61:7, Job 42:10-12, Jer 16:18, Jer 17:18, Dan 9:12, Zec 1:15, Zec 9:12, Rev 18:6
Reciprocal: Gen 41:52 – Ephraim Gen 45:5 – be not grieved Gen 50:21 – kindly unto them Exo 22:4 – he shall restore double Jos 7:26 – So the Lord 2Sa 24:16 – It is enough 2Ch 32:6 – comfortably to them Psa 90:15 – Make Isa 14:1 – the Lord Isa 30:19 – thou shalt Isa 35:3 – General Isa 49:13 – the Lord Isa 51:3 – the Lord Jer 51:10 – let us Lam 1:9 – she had Lam 4:22 – The punishment of thine iniquity Eze 6:12 – thus Eze 14:22 – therein Eze 16:42 – and will Zep 3:15 – hath taken Zec 1:13 – with good Zec 1:17 – the Lord shall Mat 9:2 – be Joh 7:37 – and cried Rom 4:7 – General 1Th 4:18 – Wherefore 1Th 5:14 – comfort 1Ti 5:17 – double
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
40:2 Speak ye kindly to Jerusalem, and cry to her, that her {b} warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received from the LORD’S hand {c} double for all her sins.
(b) The time of her affliction.
(c) Meaning, sufficient as in Isa 61:7 and full correction, or double grace, while she deserved double punishment.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Jerusalem, the personification of God’s people, the Israelites, needed persuading to respond to the Lord’s love for her. Her lover had not cast her off. Judah’s period of educational discipline involving duress (the Babylonian Captivity) was over. Punishment for her iniquity (by the sacrifice of the Lord’s servant) had been accepted as satisfactory.
"Here is the first intimation of the truth to be more fully revealed in the fifty-third chapter of the book." [Note: Young, 3:23.]
Indeed, Israel had received a double pardon, by God’s grace (cf. Isa 61:7). She had also suffered a double penalty for her sins (cf. Isa 51:19). Paying back double may be an expression indicating proportionate payment, making the punishment equivalent to the crime. [Note: See The New Bible Dictionary, 1962 ed., s.v. "Archaeology," by D. J. Wiseman.] Perhaps both thoughts, double and proportionate, are in view here.
"Jerusalem had not suffered more than its sins had deserved; but the compassion of God regarded what His justice had been obliged to inflict upon Jerusalem as superabundant." [Note: Delitzsch, 2:140.]
This verse is programmatic for chapters 40-66 of Isaiah. Chapters 40-48 assure that Judah’s captivity in Babylon will end, that "her warfare has ended." Chapters 49-57 promise that God will provide a sacrifice for sin, that "her iniquity has been removed." And chapters 58-66 guarantee that Israel will receive her promised kingdom blessings, that "she has received of the LORD’s hand double for all her sins." Throughout, deliverance is in view. [Note: Dyer, in The Old . . ., p. 562.]
". . . no one will ever reverence God but him who trusts that God is propitious toward him." [Note: John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 3.3.2 (1:594).]