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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 47:10

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 47:10

For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness: thou hast said, None seeth me. Thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee; and thou hast said in thine heart, I [am], and none else beside me.

10. thou hast trusted &c. ] Better perhaps: thou hast been confident in thy wickedness; hast perpetrated wickedness without a misgiving or a thought of retribution. “Wickedness” probably means “tyranny,” as Nah 3:19.

None seeth me ] No holy and righteous God takes notice. Cf. Psa 10:11; Psa 94:7.

10 b 12. The fourth strophe gives the reason for Babylon’s security: the elaborate system of magic for which she was famous, and in which her practical religion largely consisted. For an account of Babylonian sorcery &c., see Lenormant, Chaldaean Magic (transl.), esp. chs. 1 4.

Thy wisdom and thy knowledge ] The context shews that it is the occult knowledge of sorcery, astrology &c., that is meant.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness – The word wickedness here refers doubtless to the pride, arrogance, ambition, and oppressions of Babylon. It means, that she had supposed that she was able by these to maintain the ascendancy over other nations, and perpetuate her dominion. She supposed that by her great power, her natural advantages, and her wealth, she could resist the causes which had operated to destroy other nations. Men often confide in their own wickedness – their cunning, their artifices, their frauds, their acts of oppression and cruelty, and suppose that they are secure against the judgments of God.

None seeth me – Compare Psa 10:11 : He said in his heart, God hath forgotten; he hideth his thee; he will never see it. See also Psa 94:7.

Thy wisdom – Probably the wisdom here referred to, was that for which Babylon was distinguished, the supposed science of astrology, and the arts of divination and of incantation. It may, however, refer to the purposes of the kings and princes of Babylon; and the meaning may be, that it had been perverted and ruined by relying on their counsels. But it more probably refers to the confidence in the wisdom and science which prevailed there.

Hath perverted thee – Margin, Caused thee to turn away. That is, hath turned thee away from the path of virtue, truth, and safety. It has been the cause of thy downfall.

I am … – (See Isa 47:8)

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Isa 47:10

Thou hast said, None seeth me

Omniscience ignored


I.

THIS NOTION HAS GREAT INFLUENCE UPON THE CONDUCT OF MAN. Such a notion is convenient. Concealment is the helpmeet of wrong. It is not necessary that this be formulated. It is sufficient if the mind accustoms itself to question whether God sees. The sinner will take advantage of a doubt.


II.
THIS NOTION IS UTTERLY UNTRUTHFUL AND DELUSIVE.


III.
GOD HAS OFTEN, IN HUMAN EXPERIENCE, SHOWN THE DELUSIVENESS OF THIS NOTION, AND THE TIME IS FIXED FOR THE COMPLETE DEMONSTRATION OF ITS DELUSIVENESS.

1. Character is often seen through by man.

2. Retribution often follows mans deeds in the present world.

3. The future state will show what God saw. (Pulpit Analyst.)

Practical atheism and genuine piety

(with Gen 16:13):–


I.
PRACTICAL ATHEISM. Thou hast said, None seeth me, i.e. God is indifferent to our conduct. This is the practical denial of Divine omniscience. This haughty language suggests a sad tendency in human nature. The causes of this tendency are–

1. Dislike of God.

2. Dread of God.


II.
GENUINE PIETY. Thou God seest me.

1. The very nature of God implies this.

2. The Bible teaches it.


III.
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS which this subject conveys.

1. It warns the wicked.

2. It should restrain from evil.

3. It should incite to a beautiful and useful life.

4. It should comfort and strengthen the people of God amid the duties and conflicts and trials of life. (A. Tucker.)

None seeth me

Graceless men, having hid God from themselves, think also to hide themselves from God. (J. Trapp.)

Thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee

Pernicious knowledge


I.
EXAMINE AND VINDICATE THIS DECLARATION.

1. Of what wisdom and knowledge does Isaiah thus speak? It was human wisdom and science in the highest perfection! To this Babylon even the sages of Greece came as learners.

2. Against this wisdom and knowledge the Scriptures bring the charge of perverting mens minds in morals and religion (text; Eze 28:3-7; 1Co 1:21-27; 1Co 3:18-20; Rom 1:22-23).

3. That this testimony is not overcharged, all history proclaims.

4. All this is accounted for by the Scriptural account of the fall of man. Intellectual blindness is upon the heart of man; all his rational faculties are incapable of just conclusions on any religious subject, except they be assisted by a supernatural power.

5. Hence it inevitably follows that the cultivation of the intellectual parts of man can of itself have no tendency towards moral or spiritual good. If all the mental powers of man be in themselves depraved, the increase of his intelligence can only increase his faculty of evil; so that secular education, apart from religious and moral control, must be in itself a curse and not a blessing. It may create a generation of philosophic sceptics and apologists for vice, or even praters about virtue, but a moral and religious people it never has produced, and never can.


II.
THE REMEDY WHICH GOD HATH PROVIDED AGAINST ALL THESE INTELLECTUAL EVILS.

1. The supreme need is instruction in the wisdom and knowledge which are of God, above those which are of men.

2. This wisdom and knowledge must be imparted by those means which God has appointed. The Bible. Preaching. The instruction of children in Divine truth. (F. Close, M. A.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Thou hast trusted in thy wickedness; confidently expecting to preserve thyself by these and other wicked arts and policies. Thou hast said,

None seeth me; my counsels are so deeply and cunningly laid, that God himself can neither discover nor prevent the execution of them.

Thy wisdom and thy knowledge in state policy, and the arts mentioned above and below,

hath perverted thee; hath misled thee into the way of transgression and perdition.

Thou hast said in thine heart, I am, and none else beside me; which was said Isa 47:8, and is here repeated, to note their intolerable arrogancy and self-confidence.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

10. wickednessas in Isa13:11, the cruelty with which Babylon treated its subjectstates.

None seeth me (Psa 10:11;Psa 94:7). “There is none toexact punishment from me.” Sinners are not safe, though seemingsecret.

Thy wisdomastrologicaland political (Isa 19:11,&c., as to Egypt).

pervertedturns theeaside from the right and safe path.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness,…. In wealth and power wickedly obtained; in political schemes wickedly contrived; in her ambition and pride, tyranny and cruelty; and especially in her wicked arts of astrology, divination, and magic:

thou hast said, none seeth me; lay her schemes of policy, which she thought so deeply laid, as not to be discovered; perform her magic arts, which were secretly done, and other her wicked actions done in the dark; but nothing can be hid from the omniscient God:

thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee: her high opinion of her own wisdom and knowledge in political affairs, or in magic arts, deceived her, and turned her from right to wrong ways, which issued in her ruin. This rightly describes the Jesuits, and other emissaries of the church of Rome, who trust in their wickedness, their craft and cunning, which none can penetrate into; but there is an all seeing eye upon them, which discovers their intrigues, blasts their designs, and brings them into confusion:

and thou hast said in thine heart, I am, and none else besides me; none so wise and knowing as myself. This is what the oracle said of the Chaldeans n,

“the Chaldeans and the Hebrews are the only wise.”

This is repeated, to observe the haughty and insolent boasts of themselves.

n Apud Euseb. Praepar. Evang. l. 9. c. 10. p. 413.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

10. For thou trustedst. He explains what he said in the preceding verse, though it may be extended further, so as to be a censure of the fraud and oppression and violence and unjust practices by which the Babylonians raised themselves to so great power. Almost all large kingdoms are, what a distinguished robber pronounced them to be, great robberies; for there is no other way in which they enlarge their dominions than by extorting them from others by violence and oppression, and by driving out the lawful owners from their dwellings, that they alone may reign at large.

In thy malice. He gives the name of “malice” to that which he will afterwards adorn with more plausible names, namely, wisdom and knowledge. In this manner do tyrants usually disguise their tricks, when they lay aside all regard to justice and equity, and cunningly deceive the people; but the Lord detests and exposes them; so that it becomes manifest that it served no purpose to cover their wickedness by useless veils. Thus Job, after having said that “wise men are taken in their own wisdom,” explains this by calling it “craftiness.” (Job 5:13.)

Thou saidst, No one seeth me. When he adds that Babylon thought that her iniquities were not seen, this refers to free indulgence in sinning; for while men are kept in the discharge of duty by fear or shame, he who neither dreads God as a witness, nor thinks that men will know what he does, breaks out into every kind of licentiousness. It is true, indeed, that even the worst of men are often tormented by the stings of conscience; but, by shutting their eyes, they plunge themselves in: stupidity as in a lurking-place, and, in short, harden all their senses. Above all, we see that they have the hardihood to mock God, as if by their craftiness they could dazzle his eyes; for whenever they wish to defraud simpletons, they think it enough that they are not detected, as if they could impose on God. But to no purpose do they flatter themselves in their cunning, for the Lord will speedily take off the mask from them. All men ought therefore to abhor this wisdom, by which men deceive themselves, and accomplish their own ruin.

I, and there is none beside me. He again repeats those blasphemies, that all may plainly understand how greatly God abhors them, and how near to destruction are all who raise themselves higher than they ought.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

PRACTICAL ATHEISM AND GENUINE PIETY

Isa. 47:10. Thou hast said, None seeth me.

Gen. 16:13. And she called the name of the Lord that spake unto her, Thou God seest me.

Here is
I. PRACTICAL ATHEISM. Thou hast said, None seeth me, i.e., God is indifferent to our conduct. This is the practical denial of Divine Omniscience (Psa. 10:11; Psa. 94:7). That the self-existent and eternal God should not see is a palpable absurdity (Psa. 94:8-10). This haughty language suggests a sad tendency in human nature.

This practical atheism is very prevalent and pernicious at the present time. Immense numbers utter the Apostles Creed regularly, who exclude God from almost every province of their life. In the formation of their plans, in the management of their business, in their relations to society, &c., God is not in all their thoughts. They act as if God did not see them. They are no more restrained in their conduct than they would be if this was their deliberate conviction, or than if they had settled it in their minds that God is regardless of human actions. The causes of this tendency are not inherent in human nature, but are

(1.) Dislike of God.
(2.) Dread of God.

II. GENUINE PIETY. Thou God seest me. Heb.: Thou (art a) God of seeingof vision. God sees as well as hears (Jacobus). This pious utterance suggests a solemn fact in human historythat God sees us.

1. The very nature of God implies this. The supposition that there is anything that God does not see involves a contradiction.

2. The Bible teaches this (Job. 34:21-22; Psa. 139:1-4; Psa. 139:11-12; Psa. 139:15-16; Jer. 23:24; Amo. 9:2-3; Act. 17:27-28; Heb. 4:13). The case of Hagar is a remarkable illustrationa sudden and surprising conviction that God sees and knows all (Gen. 16:13-14).

III. GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS WHICH THIS SUBJECT CONVEYS.
Such as these:

1. It warns the wicked. Secret as their sins may seem, they are all discerned and known by Him who is their Judge (Job. 34:21-22).

2. It should restrain us from evil. The eye of a child will effectually check the execution of some evil purposes; more the eye of man or woman; yet more the eye of a holy man or woman. But Gods eye sees all things everywhere. And He is perfectly holy!

3. It should incite us to a beautiful and useful lifebeautiful in its spirit, and useful in its moral influence. The athletes of Greece and Rome were inspired to run or wrestle by the knowledge of the fact that they were surrounded by a vast assembly of spectators (Heb. 12:1). Oh! if we but, realised Gods presence, our life would become brave and beautiful and holy. God is not only present everywhere, but everywhere present to inspire, and aid, and bless.

4. It should comfort and strengthen the people of God amid the duties and conflicts and trials of life. There is One who knows all things that relate to them, and who can with the utmost ease adapt all circumstances and events to their good. They are always under their great Masters eye.Alfred Tucker.

OMNISCIENCE IGNORED

Isa. 47:10. Thou hast said, None seeth me.

I. This notion has great influence upon the conduct of man. Such a notion is convenient. Offenders against man retire to the dark when they mean to perpetrate their evil deeds. Concealment is the helpmeet of wrong. Because they sometimes, perhaps often, escape the most watchful human eyes, they fancy it possible to escape the eye of God. They would have no interest whatever in reaching this conclusion, if they never wished to do anything wrong. The sinner persuades himself of two or three things: he has gained his end; he has escaped observation; he has avoided the punishment. It is not necessary that all this be formulated. It is sufficient if the mind accustoms itself to question whether God sees. The sinner will take advantage of a doubt.

II. This notion is utterly untruthful and delusive. Whether our sinful deeds are seen by man or not, there is One to whom they are open as the day. If there is a God at all, this must be so. If you persuade yourself that God does not see, you persuade yourself that God is not. That part of the universe which God does not know, has no God. He who does not know everything is limited; therefore he is not God. But you cannot see Him. When you cannot see a man, you infer that he is not present. So with God. Thus you require that which would argue Him nothing more than a man after all. The spirituality of the Divine nature makes it possible for Him to be everywhere and see everything.

III. God has often, in human experiences, shown the delusiveness of this notion, and the time is fixed for the complete demonstration of its delusiveness.

1. Character is often seen through by man.
2. Retribution often follows mans deeds in the present world. Josephs brethren, Achan, and Saul.
3. The future state will show that God saw. At the judgment day the books will be opened. What is written there will prove that sin was seen. Hell will be an everlasting proof.

CONCLUSION.Sinner, God sees you; has seen you all along. Be warned, Christian!

1. Be encouraged and comforted by the thought that God sees. He sees the good and their goodness. Be more constantly influenced by this thought.
(1.) Let it restrain from sin.
(2.) Let it stimulate to holy obedience and earnest work (H. E. I. 22572267).J. R., in the Pulpit Analyst.

It would probably be an aid to excellence of life, if we would suppose some distinguished person always looking upon us. We are often deterred from evil by fear of the disapproval of some one whose good opinion we value. The thought of the Divine observation exerts an important influence on the conduct of such as believe it. It is unspeakably pleasant to those who regard Him as an ever-present friend, with whom they are in full sympathy, whom they desire to please. To those who do not regard Him as their friend, who are not in sympathy with Him, and who pursue a course of conduct contrary to His nature, it is repugnant. Hence men who desire to live in sin persuade themselves that He does not see their actions. This persuasion of sinners is convenient to them, but it is delusive and mischievous.
I. IT IS A CONVENIENT PERSUASION.

1. It is adopted because of its convenience. It is on that account open to suspicion. The mind, in taking it, was not in the most favourable condition for the ascertainment of truth. Why is it convenient to say God does not see? Because there is a desire to do what He does not approve. When the fraudulent merchant remains alone in his office, manipulating his accounts so as to defraud his creditors; when the impure retire behind the curtains of the night and of the chamber; when the burglar disguises himself, and in darkness plies his nefarious occupation; when the murderer watches for his victim in the depths of the forest, it is for the same reason.

2. It rests on an insecure negation. In its most pronounced form, it amounts to a denial of the Divine existence. We will not say that all Atheists are persons whose immoral lives have rendered it impossible to retain comfort along with belief in God (H. E. I. 369); but it is certain that a large proportion of the Atheism around us has no better ground than this. A man in conflict with Gods character takes refuge in the denial of His existence. Or, while not formally denying it, he persuades himself that the Divine Being is too great to concern Himself with the small affairs and acts of mortals. Or, perhaps more frequently in the strong confidence that no human eye is upon him, the sinner crowds out of his mind the fact that the Divine Eye is upon him. He does not distinctly deny it, but he practically ignores it; and, hurried on by the strength of passion, forgets that he should have taken more than his fellow-men into consideration. Hence

3. It becomes a welcome encouragement to sin. The heart is inclined to sin, and only restrained by the fear of punishment. Then if the fear of punishment is removed by the persuasion that there is no witness, the barrier is thrown down, the sinful inclination will be indulged. Gehazi never thought that the watchful eye of God had been upon his proceedings. Beware upon what grounds you release yourself from the restraint imposed by the recognition of Gods personal presence everywhere.

II. IT IS A DELUSIVE PERSUASION.
The sinner says none sees him. But there are moments when he suspects that he may have deceived himself. Conscience will sometimes whisper the question, What if God, after all, has been observant of the sin?
How frequently do transgressors find that they have not been so secluded from man as they supposed! Some unclosed crevice through which the deed has been seen. Subtle links of evidence are discovered and placed together so as to make a chain by which the most hidden crimes are dragged to light.

And it is unquestionably a delusion that GOD does not see. The sinner forgets the immense difficulties in the way of his convenient persuasion. He forgets that before he is in a position to say there is no God to see, he must know everything in the universe. Because the thing beyond his present knowledge may be thisthat there is a God. Or if he supposes that, a God existing, He does not concern Himself with men, he forgets that the idea of a personal God carries with it this notion of His intimate acquaintance with everything about His creatures.(H. E. I. 4015.)

What does He say about Himself in this respect? Does not the idea that He sees mans acts run through His Word? (Psa. 94:9; Psa. 139:1-12). In other words, Gods acquaintance with our life and ways comprehends everything, however minute. Men practise a delusion on themselves when they imagine He does not see them.

III. IT IS A MISCHIEVOUS PERSUASION.

Inasmuch as human nature is so largely influenced by the fact that there are witnesses of our conduct, it is a mischievous withdrawment of influence for good when the witness whose approbation is the most important is supposed to be withdrawn. From those who are only deterred from evil by the consciousness of being seen or the fear of punishment, it is like the withdrawment of the masters eye from the unfaithful servant. It opens the way to the commission and multiplication of sin. It increases the danger and the measure of punishment. Sin is the material out of which punishment is made. It sometimes overtakes sinners in the present world. For the most part it is deferred to the future state, perhaps to afford time and opportunity for the sinners repentance. It only falls in its full weight when the sinner has finally rejected the overtures of Gods grace. However secretly sin may have been committed, the judgment-day will reveal it (Matthew 25.; H. E. I. 3055). The conduct we are building up in our daily life is preparing the sentence of the Judge. Beware of the deceitfulness of sin. It fascinates with its eye, but it destroys with its sting. It will find out the sinner, though he retire to the deepest darkness or the remotest corner of the earth.

Cherish the belief in Gods constant presence and inspection. The very fact of unwillingness to be seen by Him shows a consciousness of something that dare not meet His eye. But is it not better to abandon that something, whatever it is, than delude ourselves with the persuasion that God does not see? Drusus would have all the city see his manner of life. Oh that we all so lived that the thought of Gods constant supervision could be a joy! The eye of His infinite holiness is upon us. With infinite approbation He sees the struggle against evil. With sorrowful condemnation He sees the sin. Fear to sin. Cultivate the disposition to please God. Suppress the inclination to the thing that would wish to elude His eye (H. E. I. 22572261).J. Rawlinson.

PERNICIOUS KNOWLEDGE
(Sunday School Sermon.)

Isa. 47:10. Thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee.

Heavy are the charges laid against the great and guilty city of Babylon. Not only had she dealt unmercifully with Gods people (Isa. 47:6), but her profligacy, luxury, pride, effeminacy, and wickedness were excessive (Isa. 47:7-8; Isa. 47:10). she was withal superstitious and idolatrous in the highest degree (Isa. 47:9; Isa. 47:12-13). What was the fruitful cause of all these abominations? Was it brutal ignorance, or barbarous uncultivation? No: it was just the reverse. Alas for the philosophers and wise men of this world! all the abominations of Babylon are here traced to human wisdom and science: Thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee. A proposition which runs counter to many prevalent opinions and prejudices. Let us, then,

I. EXAMINE AND VINDICATE THIS DECLARATION.

1. Of what wisdom and knowledge does Isaiah thus speak? It was human wisdom and science in the highest perfection! The same which opposed Moses in Egypt, Daniel in Babylon, Paul at Athens: secular learning, the cultivation of the intellect, philosophy in its deepest and most subtle forms; for to this Babylon even the sages of Greece came as learners! in a word, it was all that the mind of man could attain without revelation.

2. Against this wisdom and knowledge the Scriptures bring the charge of perverting mens minds in morals and religion. This is expressly done in this chapter. Ezekiel affirms the same of the great mercantile city of Tyre (Eze. 28:3-6). St. Paul came more into contact with this worldly wisdom than any of the Apostles, and he was perhaps more capable of appreciating its true character; and he uniformly condemns it (1Co. 1:21-27; 1Co. 3:18-20; Rom. 1:22-23).

3. That this testimony is not overcharged, all history proclaims. Superstitions, vices, and infidelity have prevailed in those countries where, and exactly at those times when, carnal wisdom has been most highly cultivated. Egypt was the birthplace and cradle of science; and in no country was idolatry more degrading. The scriptural account of the state of Babylon, where science was nurtured and developed, is corroborated by profane history. Its abominable vices could not be here detailed. The greatest sages of Greece are all chargeable with either practising or inculcating the grossest vices. The moral atrocities of the French Revolution, when Reason was deified in the person of an infamous woman, prove that time cannot alter the deteriorating tendency of unassisted human intellect.

4. All this is accounted for by the Scripture account of the fall of man. If that account is correct, no other results can follow (Job. 14:4). Equally with his other powers, the intellect of man was impaired by the fall of Adam, and became the ally of his polluted heart. The first example of its exercise was an instance of false reasoning against God Himself (Gen. 3:12). See also Gen. 6:5; Gen. 8:21; Eph. 4:18. Hence it follows that intellectual blindness is upon the heart of man; all his rational faculties are incapable of just conclusions on any religious subject, except they be assisted by a supernatural power.

5. Hence it inevitably follows that the cultivation of the intellectual parts of man can of itself have no tendency towards moral or spiritual good. If all the mental powers of man be in themselves depraved, the increase of his intelligence can only increase his faculty of evil; so that secular education, apart from religious and moral control, must be in itself a curse and not a blessing. It may create a generation of philosophic sceptics and apologists for vice, or even praters about virtue; but a moral and religious people it never has produced, and never can. Let us therefore consider

II. THE REMEDY WHICH GOD HATH PROVIDED AGAINST ALL THESE INTELLECTUAL EVILS.
Because we declare the moral powerlessness of merely human knowledge, our enemies affirm that we are the patrons of ignorance and bigotry, wish the mind to stagnate, and desire to repress scientific inquiries. Groundless charges. We fear not the progress of philosophy, if she be guided by religion; nor the wisdom of man, if it be in subordination to the wisdom of God. This is the remedy of the intellectual and moral evils of our time.

1. The supreme need of this generation is instruction in the wisdom and knowledge which are of God, above those which are of men (see vol. i. pp. 373378).

2. This wisdom and knowledge must be imparted to mankind by those means which God has appointed. The Bible. The preaching of the Gospel. The instruction of children in Divine truth (H. E. I. 793, 794, 803806, 1751, 1771).

CONCLUDING REMARKS.

1. Let us beware of the pride of mental cultivation.
2. Let all our knowledge, and all our mental powers, be consecrated to the service of God.
3. Let the poor and simple rejoice that moral and spiritual excellence are attainable by them.F. Close, A. M.: Fifty-Two Sketches of Sermons, pp. 177183.

THE SECURITY OF PROUD SINNERS

Isa. 47:10-11. For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness, &c.

In the Babylonians we have types of proud sinners in every ageboth in regard to their fancied security and the end of it.

I. THEIR FANCIED SECURITY. I shall be a lady for ever. I am, and none else beside me; I shall not sit as a widow, neither shall I know the loss of children (Isa. 47:7-8). The calamities that might come upon other men would not touch them! They were vainly confident of the perpetuity of their pomps and pleasures. Observe

1. The cause of their fancied security. They thought themselves safe and out of danger, not because they were ignorant of the uncertainty of all earthly enjoyments, and the inevitable fate that attends states and kingdoms as well as particular persons, but because they did not lay this to heart (Isa. 47:7), did not apply it to themselves, nor give it a due consideration. They lulled themselves asleep in ease and pleasure (chap. Isa. 56:12). They did not remember the latter end (Isa. 47:7) of their prosperity, that it is a fading flower, and will wither; of their iniquity, that it will be bitterness; and that the day will come when their injustice and oppression must be reckoned for and punished. To-day ungodly men are easy in their sinful ways, because they never think of death, and judgment, and their future state.

2. The ground of their fancied security.

(1.) Their power and wealth, which they had gotten by fraud and oppression, were their confidence (Isa. 47:10). Like Doeg (Psa. 52:7). Many have so debauched their own consciences, and are got to such a daring pitch of wickedness, that they stick at nothing; and this they trust to, to carry them through those difficulties which embarrass men who make conscience of what they say and do.

(2.) Their policy and craft, which they called their wisdom, were their confidence. They thought they could out-wit all mankind, and therefore might set their enemies at defiance; but their wisdom and knowledge perverted themmade them forget themselves and the preparation necessary to be made for hereafter.

3. The foolish boastings into which their fancied security betrayed them.

(1.) I shall be a lady for ever (Isa. 47:7). Babylon looked upon the patent of her honour to be not merely during the pleasure of the sovereign Lord, the fountain of honour, or during her own good behaviour, but to be perpetual (cf. Rev. 18:7). Those great ones mistake themselves who think they shall be exalted for ever; death will shortly lay them and their honour in the dust. Saints shall be saints for ever, but those who are merely this worlds great ones will be what they are only for a little while (H. E. I. 1537).

(2.) I shall not sit as a widow, neither shall I know the loss of children (Isa. 47:8), i.e., she would never lack a monarch to espouse and protect her, nor would there be any diminution in the numbers of her people. Those that are in the height of prosperity are apt to fancy themselves out of the reach of adverse fate (Psa. 10:4-6).

(3.) None seeth me (Isa. 47:10), i.e., No one sees me when I do amiss, and therefore there will be none to call me to an account. It is common for sinners to trust to their wicked arts and designs to stand them in stead, because they think they have carried them on so plausibly that none can discern the wickedness and deceit of them. How foolish are they in their wickedness! (Psa. 139:11-12.)

II. ITS END. It will be ruin (Isa. 47:11)

1. It will be a complete ruinthe ruin of all their comforts and confidences. These two things shall come upon thee (the very two things thou didst set at defiance), loss of children and widowhood. Both thy princes and thy people shall be cut off, so that thou shalt be no more a government, no more a nation. Note, God often brings upon secure sinners those very mischiefs which they thought themselves least in danger of; they shall come upon thee in their perfection, with all their aggravating circumstances, and without anything to allay or mitigate them. What a contrast between the afflictions of the godly and of the godless!

2. It will be a sudden and surprising ruin. The evil shall come in one day, nay in a moment (Isa. 47:9), which will make it much the more terrible, especially to those who were so very secure. Evil shall come upon thee, and thou shalt have neither time nor way to provide against it, or to prepare for it; for thou shalt not know from whence it rises, and therefore shalt not know where to stand upon thy guard. Thou shalt not know the morning thereof; so the Hebrew phrase is. We know just when and where the day will break and the sun rise, but we know not what the day, when it is come, will bring forth, nor when or where trouble will arise; perhaps the storm may come from that point of the compass which we little thought of. Babylon pretended to great wisdom and knowledge (Isa. 47:10), but with all her wisdom cannot foresee, nor with all her wisdom prevent, the ruin threatened (Isa. 47:11). Fair warning of this desolation was indeed given them by the prophets of the Lord; but they slighted that notice, and therefore justly is it so ordered that they should have no other notice of it, but that, partly through their own security, and partly through the swiftness and subtility of the enemy, when it came it should be a perfect surprise to them. Those that slight the warnings of the written Word, let them not expect any other premonition.

3. It will be an irresistible ruin (Isa. 47:11). There is no opposing the judgments of God when they come with commission. Babylon herself, with all her wealth, power, and multitude, is not able to put off the mischief that comes.Matthew Henry: Commentary, in loco.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(10) For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness . . .Babylon, like other nations that have followed in her steps, took for its law that Might was Right, practically denied the existence of a Ruler who saw and judged, and boasted of its wisdom. The context implies that the special form of wisdom spoken of was that of astrology and magic.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

10, 11. Fancying thyself secure in thy wickedness, thou sayest,

None seeth me. Therefore As a reason for the chastisement about to fall on thee.

Not know whence it riseth That day of thy woe shall come unexpectedly; because of thy untiring defiance, thou shalt not know how or whence it so suddenly comes. It hath no dawn to thee. In astrological divining the Chaldeans were expert, but it had no availing power in their extremity. When the morn appeared the Egyptians were destroyed; at sunrise Sodom and Gomorrah were overwhelmed; so, also, Babylon had no warning of coming evil.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

“For you have trusted in your wickedness.

You have said, ‘No one sees me.’

Your wisdom and your knowledge, it has perverted you,

And you have said in your heart, ‘I am and there is none else beside me’.”

Her trust was in her wickedness. This probably signifies all the host of her methods of magic and of the involving of the supernatural by occult means (compare Zec 5:8). But that it also includes other forms of wickedness comes out in the claim, ‘No one sees me.’ She did shameful things that had to be done in the dark. Note what the words imply. She knew in her heart that what she did was wrong. She just thought that if no one knew she could get away with it.

Indeed her very wisdom and knowledge had perverted her. She thought that she knew so much that she was almost the equal of God, that she was unique and that her citizens were above all ordinary mortals. Great knowledge often makes men think foolishly.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Isa 47:10 For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness: thou hast said, None seeth me. Thy wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee; and thou hast said in thine heart, I [am], and none else beside me.

Ver. 10. Thou hast trusted in thy wickedness. ] God calleth that “wickedness” which they counted wisdom.

None seeth me. ] Ne Deus quidem novit rationes mess. Graceless men, having hid God from themselves, think also to hide themselves from God.

Thy wisdom and thy knowledge. ] Thy magical arts and practices. Quantus artifex pereo? quadrabit in te peritum et periturum.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

trusted = confided. Hebrew. batah. App-69.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

trusted

(See Scofield “Psa 2:12”)

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

thou hast trusted: Isa 28:15, Isa 59:4, Psa 52:7, Psa 62:9

thou hast said: Isa 29:15, Job 22:13, Job 22:14, Psa 10:11, Psa 64:5, Psa 94:7-9, Ecc 8:8, Jer 23:24, Eze 8:12, Eze 9:9

Thy wisdom: Isa 5:21, Eze 28:2-6, Rom 1:22, 1Co 1:19-21, 1Co 3:19

perverted thee: or, caused thee to turn away

I am: Isa 47:8

Reciprocal: Gen 2:9 – tree of knowledge Psa 62:10 – Trust Isa 13:9 – cruel Isa 19:12 – where are thy Isa 19:14 – hath mingled Isa 30:12 – and trust Isa 47:12 – General Jer 50:29 – for she hath Jer 50:36 – dote 1Co 8:1 – Knowledge Jam 4:16 – General

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Isa 47:10-11. For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness Thou hast thought that thy cunning and policy would still preserve thee; and hast said, None seeth me My counsels are so deeply and craftily laid, and my designs so secretly carried on, that none can discover them or prevent their execution. And thou hast supposed that God himself either did not regard thee, or would not call thee to an account for thy wicked conduct. Thy wisdom and thy knowledge Thy skill in the arts of human policy, or thy pretended foreknowledge of future events by astrology; hath perverted thee Hath misled thee into the way of transgression and perdition; and thou hast said, I am, &c. This is repeated from Isa 47:8, to signify their intolerable arrogance and self-confidence. Therefore shall evil come upon thee Which thou shalt neither have time nor means to provide against or to prepare for; thou shalt not know from whence it riseth Or, rather, when it shall come; Hebrew, , the morning of it, the day, or time, of its approach. With all thy skill in astrology and fortune-telling, thou shalt neither be able to foresee the evil that is coming upon thee, nor to prevent it. This interpretation agrees with the history, Babylon being surprised by Cyrus when they were in a state of the greatest security, as is manifest both from the Scriptures and from other authentic records: see Jer 51:31; Daniel 5. And desolation shall come upon thee suddenly As a thief in the night; which thou shalt not know Or, when thou shalt not know. Thou shalt not apprehend thy danger till it be too late. Fair warning was indeed given them, by this and other prophets of the Lord, of this desolation; but they slighted that notice, and would give no credit to it; and therefore justly was it so ordered, that they should have no other warning of it, but that partly through their own security, and partly through the swiftness and subtlety of the enemy, when it came it should be a perfect surprise to them.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

47:10 For thou hast trusted in thy wickedness: thou hast said, None seeth me. Thy {k} wisdom and thy knowledge, it hath perverted thee; and thou hast said in thy heart, I [am], and none else besides me.

(k) You thought that your own wisdom and policy would have saved you.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Babylon felt secure in mistreating people because her great learning and wisdom in the magical arts had led her to conclude that she was superior and invulnerable. Knowledge puffs up, and one of the delusions it spawns is that people who know more are as morally and ethically responsible as everyone else, since they are not. A corollary is that if I can get away with something, it’s all right. Such thinking forgets that there is a sovereign and righteous God in heaven to whom we are responsible.

"Chaldean Babylon . . . combined the practical atheism of the freethinker with astrology, necromancy, and crass superstition." [Note: Archer, p. 642.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)