Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 2:19
And they shall go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth, for fear of the LORD, and for the glory of his majesty, when he ariseth to shake terribly the earth.
19. they shall go ] i.e., as R.V., men shall go.
holes of the rocks earth ] Better: caves of the rocks and into the holes of the dust (R.V. and marg.; see on Isa 2:10 above).
to shake terribly the earth ] R.V. has “to shake mightily,” but the strict rendering is to terrify the earth: a paronomasia in Heb., easily imitated in Latin, “ut terreat terram.” There is an undoubted allusion to an earthquake. Isaiah must have experienced the great earthquake in the reign of Uzziah (Amo 1:1; Zec 14:5); and the deep impression made on his youthful mind furnished him with a presentiment of the terror of the great day of Jehovah.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And they shall go – That is, the worshippers of idols.
Into the holes of the rocks – Judea was a mountainous country, and the mountains abounded with caves that offered a safe retreat for those who were in danger. Many of those caverns were very spacious. At En-gedi, in particular, a cave is mentioned where David with six hundred men hid himself from Saul in the sides of it; 1 Sam. 24. Sometimes caves or dens were artificially constructed for refuge or defense in danger; Jdg 6:2; 1Sa 13:6. Thus, because of the Midianites, the children of Israel made them the dens which are in the mountains, and caves, and strong holds. Jdg 6:2. To these they fled in times of hostile invasion. When the men of Israel saw that they were in a strait (for the people were distressed), then the people did hide themselves in caves, and in thickets, and in rocks, and in high places, and in pits; 1Sa 13:6; compare Jer 41:9. Mahomet speaks of a tribe of Arabians, the tribe of Thamud, who hewed houses out of the mountains to secure themselves; Koran, ch. xv. and xxvi. Grots or rooms hewed out of rocks for various purposes are often mentioned by travelers in Oriental regions: see Maundrell, p. 118, and Burckhardts Travels in Syria, and particularly Labordes Journey to Arabia Petrea. Such caves are often mentioned by Josephus as affording places of refuge for banditti and robbers; Ant., B. xiv. ch. 15, and Jewish Wars, B. i. ch. 16. To enter into the caves and dens, therefore, as places of refuge, was a very natural image to denote consternation. The meaning here is, that the worshippers of idols should be so alarmed as to seek for a place of security and refuge; compare Isa 2:10.
When he ariseth – This is an expression often used in the Scriptures to denote the commencement of doing anything. It is here derived, perhaps, from the image of one who has been in repose – as of a lion or warrior, rousing up suddenly, and putting forth mighty efforts.
To shake terribly the earth – An image denoting the presence of God, for judgment or punishment. One of the magnificent images which the sacred writers often use to denote the presence of the Lord is, that the earth shakes and trembles; the mountains bow and are convulsed; 2Sa 22:8 : Then the earth shook and trembled; the foundations of heaven moved, because he was wroth; See also Isa 2:9-16; Jdg 5:4; Hab 3:6-10 : The mountains saw thee and trembled; Heb 12:26 : Whose voice then shook the earth. The image here denotes that he would come forth in such wrath that the very earth should tremble, as if alarmed his presence. The mind cannot conceive more sublime images than are thus used by the sacred writers.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Isa 2:19
And they shall go into the holes of the rocks
No escape from the judgments of God
They shall vainly seek to escape, as unarmed peasants or women fly into the nearest cave or hole when they hear the hoofs of some plundering tribe of Edom or Ishmael from the desert; but the judgment of Jehovah shall reach them, as the earthquake (then, as now, not uncommon in Judaea) would bring down the reck on him who sought refuge in it.
(Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
For fear of the Lord
The fear of the Lord
1. It is some alleviation of a mans misfortune, if he knows the worst of it. For the apprehension of evil is sometimes worse than the evil itself. But this rule holds good only in temporal evils.
2. In the present state of things, men can harden their hearts against all the threatenings and terrors of the Lord: and have so accustomed themselves to dispute and disbelieve everything which is supernatural, that the concerns of another world make but faint impressions upon them.
3. The great foundation, therefore, on which the substance of our religion is built, is the belief of that day when God shall call men to an account for all the works which they have done in this life, and shall deal with them according to the promises and threatenings of His own word.
4. The way not to be afraid of the wrath of God then, is to stand in awe of it now.
5. He hath declared that He hath an extraordinary indignation at proud men, i.e., such as have no regard for His laws, and that He will one day effectually humble them.
6. When we fear God as a merciful and gracious Father, we live easy in His family, and rejoice in His presence; but a guilty fear causes us to fly from
Him like our first parent, dreading Him as justly provoked to be angry with us, and ready to execute His threatened judgments upon us.
7. The fear of the Lord, says Solomon, is the beginning of wisdom; and I will venture to add, that it is the end of it too: for a man can never be denominated wise without this fear; whenever he lays it aside, he certainly plays the fool.
8. There is no man who, by daily reading and hearing of Gods Word, keeps the rule of his life in his eye, but must see that he has manifold reasons to be humbled for not acting up to it.
9. And as horrible fear, so shall shame and confusion of face be the portion of all those who will not now be restrained by a virtuous modesty from offending against God.
10. Let us, then, wisely make choice of these restraints in due season, and keep up their influence so strong in our minds, that no sinful temptation, even in the closest retirement and most secret corner, may ever be able to prevail against them. (W. Reading, M. A.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 19. – 21. Into the holes of the rocks – “Into caverns of rocks”] The country of Judea being mountainous and rocky, is full of caverns, as appears from the history of David’s persecution under Saul. At En-gedi, in particular, there was a cave so large that David with six hundred men hid themselves in the sides of it; and Saul entered the mouth of the cave without perceiving that any one was there, 1Sa 24:3. Josephus, Antiq., lib. xiv., c. 15, and Bell. Jud., lib. 1, c. 16, tells us of a numerous gang of banditti, who, having infested the country, and being pursued by Herod with his army retired into certain caverns almost inaccessible, near Arbela in Galilee, where they were with great difficulty subdued. Some of these were natural, others artificial. “Beyond Damascus,” says Strabo, lib. xvi., “are two mountains called Trachones, from which the country has the name of Trachonitis; and from hence towards Arabia and Iturea, are certain rugged mountains, in which there are deep caverns, one of which will hold four thousand men.” Tavernier, Voyage de Perse, part ii., chap. iv., speaks of a grot, between Aleppo and Bir, that would hold near three thousand horse. “Three hours distant from Sidon, about a mile from the sea, there runs along a high rocky mountain, in the sides of which are hewn a multitude of grots, all very little differing from each other. They have entrances about two feet square: on the inside you find in most or all of them a room of about four yards square. There are of these subterraneous caverns two hundred in number. It may, with probability at least, be concluded that these places were contrived for the use of the living, and not of the dead. Strabo describes the habitations of the Troglodytae to have been somewhat of this kind.” – Maundrell, p. 118. The Horites, who dwelt in Mount Seir, were Troglodytae, as their name horim, imports. But those mentioned by Strabo were on each side of the Arabian gulf. Mohammed (Koran, chap. xv. xxvi.) speaks of a tribe of Arabians, the tribe of Thamud, “who hewed houses out of the mountains, to secure themselves.” Thus, “because of the Midianites, the children of Israel made them the dens which are in the mountains, and caves and strong holds,” Jdg 6:2. To these they betook themselves for refuge in times of distress and hostile invasion: “When the men of Israel saw that they were in a strait, for the people were distressed, then the people did hide themselves in caves, and in thickets, and in rocks, and in high places, and in pits,” 1Sa 13:6, and see Jer 41:9. Therefore “to enter into the rock, to go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth,” was to them a very proper and familiar image to express terror and consternation. The prophet Hosea, Ho 10:8, hath carried the same image farther, and added great strength and spirit to it:
“They shall say to the mountains, Cover us;
And to the hills, Fall on us;”
which image, together with these of Isaiah, is adopted by the sublime author of the Revelation, Re 6:15-16, who frequently borrows his imagery from our prophet. – L.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
They, the idolatrous Israelites,
shall go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth; their usual places of retreat in cases of danger; of which see Jos 10:16; Jdg 6:2; 1Sa 13:6.
To shake terribly the earth; either properly, or rather figuratively, to send dreadful judgments upon the inhabitants of the land.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
19. The fulfilment answersexactly to the threat (Isa 2:10).
theytheidol-worshippers.
cavesabounding inJudea, a hilly country; hiding-places in times of alarm (1Sa13:6).
shake . . . earthandthe heavens also (Heb 12:26).Figure for severe and universal judgments.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And they shall go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth,…. That is, the worshippers of idols, as they are bid to do, Isa 2:10
for fear of the Lord, and for the glory of his majesty,
[See comments on Isa 2:10]
when be ariseth; out of his place; Jarchi says, at the day of judgment; but it respects the judgment of the great whore, and the time when Babylon the great shall come in remembrance before God:
to shake terribly the earth; at which earthquake, or shaking of the earth, that is, a revolution of the antichristian state, the tenth part of the city will fall, and seven thousand men of name be slain, Re 9:13 and so the Targum paraphrases it,
“when he shall be revealed, to break in pieces the wicked of the earth;”
which will be done by him, as the vessels of a potter are broken to shivers, Re 2:27.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
What the idolaters themselves will do when Jehovah has so completely deprived their idols of all their divinity, is then described in Isa 2:19: “And they will creep into caves in the rocks, and cellars in the earth, before the terrible look of Jehovah, and before the glory of His majesty, when He ariseth to put the earth in terror.” Mearah is a natural cave, and mechillah a subterraneous excavation: this is apparently the distinction between the two synonyms. “To put the earth in terror:” larotz ha – aretz , a significant paronomasia, which can be reproduced in Latin, thus: ut terreat terram . Thus the judgment would fall upon the earth without any limitation, upon men universally (compare the word ha – adam in Isa 2:20, which is scarcely ever applied to a single individual (Jos 14:15), excepting, of course, the first man, but generally to men, or to the human race) and upon the totality of nature as interwoven in the history of man – one complete whole, in which sin, and therefore wrath, had gained the upper hand. When Jehovah rose up, i.e., stood up from His heavenly throne, to reveal the glory manifested in heaven, and turn its judicial fiery side towards the sinful earth, the earth would receive such a shock as would throw it into a state resembling the chaos of the beginning. We may see very clearly from Rev 6:15, where this description is borrowed, that the prophet is here describing the last judgment, although from a national point of view and bounded by a national horizon.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
19. And they shall enter into the holes of the rocks He had formerly used other words when addressing them in the second person, Enter into the rock, (Isa 2:10,) that he might inflict a severer stroke on their minds. But now he declares what they will do, and says that they must enter; and hence it is evident that the former statement was not an exhortation, but a severe denunciation of the wrath of God, in order to terrify wicked and obstinate men, who despise all warnings and all threatenings.
From the presence of the terror of Jehovah, and from the glory of his majesty What he adds about the terror of God must be understood to mean that terror which was thrown into them by the Chaldeans and Assyrians, whose hand he called a little before, and now also calls, the glory of God for God employed their agency to chastise his people. Although they were wicked and treacherous, yet they promoted the glory of God; for even the devil himself contributes in some way to the glory of God, though contrary to his wish. Thus he speaks of the Assyrians and Chaldeans, because in the punishments which the Lord will inflict on the Jews by their agency we may behold his glory
The same thing is confirmed by the word Arise, which means to go before the judgment-seat. In the phrase which immediately follows, לערץ הארף, ( laarotz haaretz,) to shake terribly the earth, there is an elegant allusion or play on words, which can hardly be conveyed in any other language. (46) He says that the Lord ariseth, because he appears to sleep so long as he delays his judgments. But he ariseth, when he comes forth as a judge to inflict punishments on the wicked; so as to make it evident to men that nothing escapes the knowledge, or is hidden from the eyes, of Him who permits no crime to pass unpunished.
(46) The “play on words,” which turns entirely on the sound of the Hebrew noun and verb, cannot be expressed in a translation. Our author has illustrated it by ad terram terrendam , which again may be fully imitated by this alliteration, “to terrify the terrestrial globe.” — Ed.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(19) And they shall go into the holes of the rocks.The imagery of the earthquake in Uzziahs reign (see Note on Isa. 2:10) is still present to Isaiahs thoughts. (See Rev. 6:15.)
When he ariseth to shake terribly the earth.The Hebrew verb and noun have the emphasis of a paronomasia which cannot be reproduced in English, but of which the Latin ut terreat terram gives some idea.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
19. Holes of the rocks In Isa 2:10 similar language is used as a warning, but here it is a direct prediction. Idols, the whole mass of them, shall pass away into their natural utter nothingness.
When he ariseth Literally, In his arising; in God’s addressing himself with terribly obvious purpose.
Shake earth The intimation seems to be a recent earthquake, and all this prophetic speech may have taken advantage of the event when the worldly indifference of the people was for the time arrested. Amos speaks of the great earthquake in Uzziah’s reign. Amo 1:1. God is the immediate cause of all physical phenomena, and he makes the physical serve the moral. In all his great comings to “shake terribly the earth,” he uses the one phenomenon as the means to engage serious attention, the other, as the end, to wit, to secure moral reformation.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Isa 2:19. And they shall go into the holes of the rocks The idea here, as every one must perceive, is taken from the nature of the land of Canaan; which was full of caves and dens. See Jdg 6:2. The meaning of the metaphor is, that there should be at this time a great and most bright display of the divine majesty and justice, which the impious and hypocritical could not bear; and that, stricken with the terror of the divine judgment, they should consult for their own safety, with the utmost terror and consternation, in caves, and dens, and holes of the earth. See Hos 10:10. Rev 6:16. This refers to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldees.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Isa 2:19 And they shall go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth, for fear of the LORD, and for the glory of his majesty, when he ariseth to shake terribly the earth.
Ver. 19. And they shall go into the holes. ] See Isa 2:10 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
And they: Isa 2:10, Isa 2:21, 1Sa 13:6, 1Sa 14:11, Jer 16:16, Hos 10:8, Mic 7:17, Luk 23:30, Heb 11:38, Rev 6:15, Rev 9:6
earth: Heb. dust
for fear: Isa 2:10, 2Th 1:9
when he: Isa 30:32, Psa 7:6, Psa 18:6-15, Psa 76:7-9, Psa 114:5-7, Mic 1:3, Mic 1:4, Nah 1:3-6, Hab 3:3-14, Hag 2:6, Hag 2:21, Hag 2:22, Heb 12:26, 2Pe 3:10-13, Rev 6:12-14, Rev 11:13, Rev 11:19, Rev 16:18, Rev 20:11
Reciprocal: Jos 10:16 – in a cave 1Sa 5:4 – the head 2Sa 22:46 – out Job 9:6 – shaketh Job 30:6 – dwell Job 37:22 – with Psa 66:3 – How terrible Isa 7:19 – in the holes Isa 23:11 – stretched Isa 24:22 – they shall Isa 32:11 – be troubled Jer 4:29 – they shall go Jer 48:28 – leave Eze 26:15 – shake Amo 9:2 – dig Nah 3:11 – thou shalt be hid Luk 4:44 – Galilee Rev 21:23 – for
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Isa 2:19. And they The idolatrous Israelites; shall go into the holes of the rocks, &c. Their usual places of retreat in cases of danger; see Jos 10:16; Jdg 6:2; 1Sa 13:6. The idea is taken from the nature of the land of Canaan; which was full of caves and dens; for fear of the Lord, and the glory of his majesty, &c. The meaning is, that there should be, at this time, a great and most bright display of the divine majesty and justice, which the impious and hypocritical could not bear; and that, struck with the terror of the divine judgment, they should consult for their safety, with the utmost terror and consternation, in caves, dens, and holes of the earth. The Prophet Hosea hath carried the same image further, and added great strength and spirit to it, Hos 10:8. They shall say to the mountains, Cover us; and to the hills, Fall on us; which image, together with these of Isaiah, is adopted by the sublime author of the Rev 6:15-16. See Dodd and Bishop Lowth.