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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 51:20

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 51:20

Thy sons have fainted, they lie at the head of all the streets, as a wild bull in a net: they are full of the fury of the LORD, the rebuke of thy God.

20. Thy sons have swooned ] lit. “were shrouded,” a usual oriental metaphor (Amo 8:13; Jon 4:8; Nah 3:11). For the idea cf. Lam 2:11; Lam 2:19; Lam 2:21. at the head of all the streets ] Lam 2:19; Lam 4:1.

as a wild bull in a net ] R.V., rightly, as an antelope (Deu 14:5) in a net, exhausted by its vain struggles to get free.

they are full of the fury &c. ] The children have drunk of the same cup as their mother.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Thy sons – Jerusalem is here represented as a mother. Her sons, that is, her inhabitants, had become weak and prostrate everywhere, and were unable to afford consolation.

They lie at the head of all the streets – The head of the streets is the same which in Lam 2:19; Lam 4:1, is denominated the top of the streets. The head or top of the streets denotes, doubtless, the beginning of a way or street; the corner from which other streets diverge. These would be public places, where many would be naturally assembled, and where, in time of a siege, they would be driven together. This is a description of the state produced by famine. Weak, pale, and emaciated, the inhabitants of Jerusalem, in the places of public concourse, would lie prostrate and inefficient, and unable to meet and repel their foes. They would be overpowered with famine, as a wild bull is insnared in a net, and rendered incapable of any effort. This reters undoubtedly to the famine that would be produced during the siege of the Babylonians. The state of things under the siege has been also described by Jeremiah:

Arise, cry out in the night;

In the beginning of the watches pour out thine heart before the Lord;

Lift up thy hands toward him for the life of thy young children,

That faint for hunger at the top of every street.

The young and old lie on the ground in the streets,

My virgins and my young men are fallen by the sword;

Thou hast slain them in the day of thy anger;

Thou hast killed, and not pitied.

Lam 2:19-21

The tongue of the sucking child cleaveth to the roof of

His mouth for thirst;

The young children ask bread, and no man breaketh it unto them;

They that did feed delicately are desolate in the streets;

They that were brought up in scarlet embrace dunghills.

Lam 4:4-5

As a wild bull in a net – The word rendered here wild bull is to’. Gesenius supposes it is the same as t’o, a species of gazelle, so called from its swiftness. Aquila, Symm. and Theod. render it here, Oruch – Oryx; Jerome also renders it, Oryx – A wild goat or stag. The Septuagint renders it, Seutlion hemiephthon – A parboiled beet! The Chaldee, As broken bottles. Bochart (Hieroz. i. 3. 28), supposes it means a species of mountain-goat, and demonstratos that it is common in the East to take such animals in a net. Lowth renders it, Oryx. The streets of Hebrew towns, like those of ancient Babylon, and of most modern Oriental cities, had gates which were closed at night, and on some occasions of broil and danger. A person then wishing to escape would be arrested by the closed gate and if he was pursued, would be taken somewhat like a wild bull in a net. It was formerly the custom, as it is now in Oriental countries, to take wild animals in this manner. A space of ground of considerable extent – usually in the vicinity of springs and brooks, where the animals were in the habit of repairing morning and evening – was enclosed by nets into which the animals were driven by horsemen and hounds, and when there enclosed, they were easily taken. Such scenes are still represented in Egyptian paintings (see Wilkinsons Ancient Egyptians, vol. iii. pp. 2-36), and such a custom prevailed among the Romans. Virgil represents AEneas and Dido as repairing to a wood for the purpose of hunting at break of day, and the attendants as surrounding the grove with nets or toils.

Venatum AEneas, unaque miscrrima Dido,

In nemus ire parant, ubi primos crastinus ortus

Extulerit Titan, radusque retexerit orbem.

His ego nigrantem conmixta grandine nimbum,

Dum trepidant alae, saltusque indagine cingunt,

Desuper infundam, et tonitru coelum omne ciebo.

AEn. iv. 117ff.

The idea here is plain. It is, that as a wild animal is secured by the toils of the hunter, and rendered unable to escape, so it was with the inhabitants of Jerusalem suffering under the wrath of God. They were humbled, and prostrate, and powerless, and were, like the stag that was caught, entirely at the disposal of him who had thus insnared them.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 20. As a wild bull in a net: they are full, c. – “Like the oryx taken in the toils drenched to the full”] “Perhaps michmerah meleim.” SECKER. The demonstrative he, prefixed to meleim, full, seems improper in this place.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Thy sons have fainted; they are so far from being able to comfort thee, as was said, Isa 51:18, that they themselves faint away for want of comfort, and through famine.

They lie dead by famine, or the sword of the enemy,

at the head of all the streets; where men enter in or go out of the streets, where the enemy found them either opposing their entrance, or running out of them to make an escape.

As a wild bull in a net: those of them who are not slain are struggling for life; and although they murmur at God, and fight with men, yet they cannot prevail or escape.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

20. head of all . . . streets(Lam 2:19; Lam 4:1).

wild bullrather,”oryx” [JEROME],or gazelle [GESENIUS], orwild goat [BOCHART];commonly in the East taken in a net, of a wide sweep, into which thebeasts were hunted together. The streets of cities in the East oftenhave gates, which are closed at night; a person wishing to escapewould be stopped by them and caught, as a wild animal in a net.

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

Thy sons have fainted,…. Through want of food, or at the desolation made, and have no spirit in them to appear in the interest of true religion:

they lie at the head of all the streets; emaciated by famine, and not able to walk, but drop down in the streets, and there lie panting and pining away; or slain by the enemy; or with the famine, and the sword, as Aben Ezra, and none to bury them; so the dead bodies of the witnesses shall lie in the street of the great city unburied, Re 11:8

as a wild bull in a net; that is slain, being taken; or, if alive, however it flings about and struggles, cannot extricate itself: so it may denote such that survive the calamity, yet held under the power of the enemy; and though inwardly fretting, and very impatient, cannot help themselves, no more than such a creature taken in a toil or net; which Aben Ezra takes to be a fowl, to which a net best agrees; and the Vulgate Latin version renders it, “as the oryx snared”; which Drusius says is the name of a bird; though it is used for a wild goat. So Aristotle w makes mention of it as of the goat kind, and says it has two hoofs, or is cloven footed, and has one horn; and Bochart x takes it to be the same with the unicorn of the Scriptures, or the “monoceros”; and, according to some writers y, it is a very fierce and bold creature, and not easily taken; and therefore it is no wonder, when it is in the net, that it strives, though in vain, and till it is weary, to get out of it, and yet is obliged to lie there. But Kimchi says the word here used signifies a wild ox or bull z, as we render it: in Hebrew it is called “tho” or “thoa”, and very probably is the same with the “thoos” mentioned by Aristotle a and Pliny b, and is rendered a wild ox in De 14:5, where it is reckoned among sheep, goats, and deer. It is strange that the Septuagint should render it, “as beet half boiled”; or flaccid and withering, as the Syriac and Arabic versions, taking it for an herb: and as much out of the way is the Targum, which renders it,

“as broken bottles:”

they are full of the fury of the Lord, the rebuke of thy God; that is, Jerusalem’s sons, the members of the church of God, professors of religion, now full of calamities, which may seem to flow from the wrath of God, and be rebukes in fury, when they are only in love, Re 3:19 and from whence they shall be delivered, and their enemies punished, as follows.

w Hist. Animal. l. 2. c. 1. x Hierozoic. l. 3. c. 27, 28. y Oppian. de Cyneget. l. 2. apud Gataker. & Sanctium in loc. “saevus oryx”, Martial. l. 13. Epigr. 95. z And so it is explained in Gloss. in T. Bab. Bava Kama, fol. 117. 1. a Hist. Animal. l. 2. c. 17. b Nat. Hist. l. 8. c. 34.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

20. Thy sons have fainted. He describes more fully the lamentable and wretched condition of the Church, when he says that her children he prostrate. A mother cannot be visited with any grief more bitter than to have her children slain before her eyes, and not one or two of them, but so great a number as to fill the roads with the slaughter.

As a wild bull in a net. The metaphor is taken from bears or other savage animals, by which he means that even the strongest of them have, as it were, been caught in snares.

Full of the indignation of Jehovah. By this expression he distinctly states that none of these events are accidental, lest they should suppose that any of them has happened by chance, or lest they should accuse the Lord of cruelty for having punished them severely; because his judgment is just and righteous. This is what he means, when he says that this punishment has proceeded from the rebuke of the Lord. Yet we must bear in mind his object which I have already mentioned, that believers ought not to throw away the hope of grace, though innumerable calamities prompt and urge them to despair.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

JEHOVAHS ANGER

Isa. 51:17; Isa. 51:20; Isa. 51:22. The fury of the Lord, &c. [1587]

[1587] See vol. i. pp. 284286, and H. E. I. 22882294. Gods anger must, of course, be understood in a manner in accordance with the Divine nature; and we are not to suppose that precisely the same passions or the same feelings are referred to when this language is used of God which is implied when it is used of men. It means that His nature, His laws, His government, His feelings, are all arrayed against the wicked; that He cannot regard the conduct of the wicked with favour; that He will punish them. He is angry with the wicked continually, constantly, always. It is not excitement, it is not a temporary passion, such as we see in men. It is not sudden emotion, soon to be succeeded by a different feeling when the passion passes off. It is the steady and uniform attribute of His unchanging nature to be always opposed to the wicked,to all forms of sin; and in Him, in this respect, there will be no change. The wicked will find Him no more favourable to their character and course of life to-morrow than He is to-day; no more beyond the grave than this side of the tomb. This is a fearful truth in regard to the sinner, and should make him tremble:(1.) that God is angry with himthat all His character, and all the principles of His government and law, are and must be arrayed against him; and (2.), that in this respect there is to be no change; that if he continues to be wicked, as he is now, he will every day and alwaysthis side the grave and beyondfind all the attributes of God engaged against him, and pledged to punish him. God has no attribute that can take part with sin or the sinner.A. Barnes, D.D.

The wrath of God is like great waters that are dammed for the present; they increase more and more, and rise higher and higher, till an outlet is given; and the higher the stream is stopped, the more rapid and mighty is its course when once it is let loose. If God should only withdraw His hand from the floodgate, it would immediately fly open, and the fiery floods of the fierceness and wrath of God would rush forth with inconceivable fury, and would come upon you with omnipotent power; and if your strength were ten thousand times greater than it is, yea, ten thousand times greater than the strength of the stoutest, sturdiest devil in hell, it would be nothing to withstand or endure it.Jonathan Edwards.

I. It is real. There is such a thing as anger in God. Many are the expressions used concerning itjealousy, vengeance, fury, wrath; all to indicate its existence, and to show us that the human theories of Divine universal benevolence are not true, being got up for a purpose, and that purpose to persuade the sinners own conscience that he need not be alarmed because of his guilt; and that no one need dread the infliction of punishment, except perhaps a few of the most wicked of our race. But Gods words are not exaggerations, nor words of course. There is a terrible truth contained in these oft-repeated words of Scripture, His anger was kindled. Loving and gracious as Jehovah is, His anger is real. When Jesus comes the second time, He comes to take vengeance.

II. It is righteous. It is not the rage of selfishness, or passion, or affront. It is judicial anger; the anger of the righteous judge. It is anger against sin, against the sinner, anger because of insulted law and dishonoured righteousness. Nothing in it is unjust, or cruel, or arbitrary. Then the condemned soul will be compelled hereafter to say, It is all right and just, it shall be right and just to all eternity.

III. It is terrible. Though calm, it is unutterably awful; nay, overwhelming. No power and no numbers shall be able to stand before it. It shall sweep everything before it like a whirlwind. The expulsion from paradise, the Deluge, the ruin of Sodom, are specimens of its terribleness. The lost soul shall be utterly overwhelmed. ()

IV. It is inexorable. Nothing but genuine repentance shall turn it aside, or soften it when once it is kindled. The vengeance of eternal fire, the everlasting burning, the worm that dieth not, these are awful words, and however figurative they may be, they represent terrible realities (H. E. I. 2804).Horatius Bonar, D.D.: Light and Truth, Old Testament, p. 345.

THE MEMORIAL NAME

Isa. 51:22. Thy LORD the LORD, and thy God.

The history, which includes the textual statement. Consider

1. The character which God here claims for Himself.

1. Independent and self-existent in Being, and thereforeInfinitefills all space; everlastingfills all time; the source of all being.
2. Unlimited in perfection. All perfections. Infinite in each.
3. Unlimited in sovereignty. He does according to His will. His will the highest reason. None can counsel Him.
4. Unlimited in the extent of His government. None are exempted from it.
5. Himself the end of all things. Everything originates with Him. Everything terminates in Him.

II. The limitations which men put upon the claim which is thus made by God. They put limits upon,

1. His being. The having and worshipping false gods. That is not God which is not self-existent; and two self-existent Gods cannot be conceived.
2. His perfections. The conceptions which men form and express. The preference which man gives to the creature. The silence of man in His praise. The little imitation there is of Him. The manner in which men expect to recommend themselves to His favour. The manner in which His servants are treated.
3. On His absolute sovereignty. Confining our attention to systems of doctrine called Christian, men question Gods absolute sovereignty, in the election, calling, justification, and perseverance of His people.
4. On the extent of His government. Some exclude Him from creation, providence, in prayer, conversation, conduct, civil authority, the government of the Church, and conscience.
5. As the end of all things. Men make themselves the end.
CONCLUSION.He is not, and cannot be limited. In acting, He disregards the limits of men. He punishes the pride and insolence of man for limiting Him. He calls the notice of His people to the vindication of His glory.James Stewart: Outlines of Discourses, pp. 24.

THE STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS OF THE CHURCH
(Preached before a Presbyterian General Assembly.)

Isa. 52:1. Awake, awake; put on thy strength, O Zion.

This language is a direct address from God to His ancient Church. The image which it presents is that of a sleeping giant. The Church of God had been a giant power in the world; but at the time in which God speaks it had relapsed into slumberhad put off its strength, and, being beset with enemies, this position of torpor and inaction was one of peril. Hence this arousing note of alarm, Awake, awake! The slumbering giant is not only summoned to arouse to consciousness, but to put on and put forth his strength for conflict and for victory.

The text is a forcible reminder of the mysterious and discouraging fact that the Church of God, in all ages, may have its times of weakness, as well as its times of power. When the Church first went forth from Jerusalem, a little flock, scattered hither and thither by the storm of persecution, it was a time of power. It was then but an infant of days, but it lifted empires off their hinges, and turned the stream of centuries out of its channel.(Richter.)

But a time of weakness followed this era of powerthe dark night of the middle ages. Again there came a time of power when, on the morning of the Reformation, the Church heard the cry, Awake, awake! and, springing up with renewed youth, it put on its strength. The chill of formalism followed the track of the Reformation, and the Church sank into the coma of wide-spread paralysis; a disguised Romanism riveted her fetters; the Socinian apostasy spread its blight over Great Britain. But then came times of power, when the Church arose in quickened majesty; and still again, times of wondrous spiritual revival, when the call sounded by Wesley and Whitefield, like the voice of the prophet in the valley of vision, seemed to awake the dead.

I. Why these periods of weakness? If the Church is a giant begirt with power, and that power is divine; if it is commissioned to exercise the evil spirit from the world, and goes forth with the promise of help and victory, then why these times of weakness? Answer:The power of the Church is divine, but it is also human. What man can do, he must do. To roll away the stone from the grave of Lazarus was something that man could do; hence our Lord commanded human hands to do it. This act of human strength must antecede the word of power which raises the dead. Divine power and human strength must work together, each in its appropriate sphere. Divine efficiency does not supersede human agency, but only supplements its weakness. If mans part in the work or warfare of the Church is properly executed, Gods part will never fail. But, as the terror of the iron chariots of the enemy paralysed the strength of Judahso that, the human part being wanting, the victory was lost (Jdg. 1:19)so, in the Church, if any cause supervenes to weaken, or render ineffective, the strength which God expects us to put forth, He will not depart from His plan, or interpose to save us from the result of our own weakness, or to hide us from the scorn and derision of the world.

II. What is the strength of the Church, and when is it put off?

1. The first element of power is the Gospel. This is the one element for our work, the one weapon for our warfareit is the power of God. The astronomer looks at the heavens. These stars are to be counted; these constellations are to be mapped; the orbits of these planets are to be observed. Here is a vast and complicated work; but how is it to be done? By the telescope. He has this, and nothing else. All the great results of astronomy must spring, first of all, from this single instrument. Just so the Church looks out upon its work. It is commissioned to bring this world in captivity to the obedience of Christ. A mighty and multiform work; how is it to be achieved? By the Gospel. God has given us this, and nothing else, to save the world. It is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth. It pleased God, by the foolishness of preaching, to save them that believe. Moses was commanded to smite the rock at Horeb, and bring from its bosom streams of water. How? He was given but one instrumentthe slender rod that he held in his hand. To human view the rock would be more likely to break the rod than the rod to rend the rock; but that fragile rod was Gods ordained instrument of power; and, when it smote, the riven rock gushed with the living waters. Just so, the Word of God is the rod of power. We are commanded to smite with it alone, for by nothing else can the stony heart be broken. For every work which the Church is sent to do, this is the instrument of power.

This being so, we can readily see from this standpoint how this strength may be put off, and power give place to weakness. To neglect, to withhold, to minimise, to obscure in any manner the truth of God, is to put off this element of power, and to bring in a time of weakness.
This may occur

(1.) When the truth is depreciated, or its necessity not clearly recognised. Thus, for example, some say, Preach morality; let us hear more about the duties of life, and less about the doctrines of the Cross. Morality, without principle, is a sham; it is tinselled fruit tied upon a Christmas-treethe only connection is the tape that ties it. Morality is the fruit of principle, but principle is doctrineand the only doctrine that bears this fruit is the doctrine of the Cross.

(2.) Whenever the Gospel is subordinated to human themes. If the Church dispenses essays upon history, antiquities, philosophy, politics, science, or reflects the light of the secular press, &c., it will be no marvel if it sinks into imbecility.

(3.) Our strength is crippled when the Gospel is caricatured by sensational themes, discussions, illustrations and expedients, which attract attention, indeed, but which belittle the sacred doctrine of the Cross.

But whilst causes like these paralyse our power, there are others which produce simply an abatement of strength. For example, the Church can only put forth half its strength when the Gospel is but half told. If it sets out in full light the Divine love, whilst it keeps back Divine justice under the shadow of a dark eclipse; if it tells of Christs teachings, and is silent about Christs sacrifice; if it points to Christs life, and not to Christs blood, as the centre of saving efficiency; if it sets out the freedom of man, and holds in abeyance Divine sovereignty and efficacious grace; or if it minimises the Gospel in the one sentence, Come to Jesus; or if it lays Christ as a humble suppliant at the feet of men until proud sinners imagine that it is a stoop of condescension to permit Jesus to save themthen, surely, it is no marvel that men turn away from a belittled Gospel and a belittled Saviour, and that the Church sits in weakness.

2. The second element is the ministry. Let us not lose sight of the figure of the text. The Church is a giant; the Gospel is the instrument of his workthe weapon of his warfare. But what wields the weapon? The giants armthis is the ministry. It is the arm or the agent of the Churchs power. The symbol of the Gospel is a hammer, a word; but a hammer is powerless without a strong hand to use it; the sword is ineffective without a skilful arm to wield it. This arm, this sword, this agent of strength and skill, is the ministry.

This figure seems to describe accurately the kind of power with which the ministry is invested. It is not an original power inherent in itself, but a delegated power. It is the power of an agent, and it has an instrument of power put into its hands. It is not a power to infuse grace, or to forgive sins, or to bind the conscience, but simply an administrative power. It is a power of vocation to utter the Gospel call, to summon Gods sons from afar, and His daughters from the ends of the earth. A teaching powergo teach all nations; preach the Gospel to every creature. A dispensing power to break the Bread of Life, and to distribute, with a liberal hand, to all Gods children, giving to each a portion in due season. A power to reprove, rebuke, and exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine.
We may readily see when this strength is put on, and when it is put off. Whatever cripples or weakens or interferes with the right use and proper functions of a giants arm, weakens and abates the effectiveness of the giant himself; so whatever weakens the ministry, or hinders its effectiveness, puts off to that extent the strength of the Church, and introduces a time of weakness and defeat.

(1.) The ministry, as an arm of power, may be withered by a perfunctory education. Ministers may be taught to know about God, but not to know God. They may learn to explain and defend the Gospel, without having ever felt that a single Gospel truth has been riveted as a living, burning power in their own souls. A minister who knows what it is to be a saved sinner, can tell of it with such power as to make others feel that there is nothing between them and eternal death but the blood of Jesus. But, without this experience, the minister will be a perfunctory drone, stepping in a treadmill, or doing out his lifeless essay whilst sinners are slipping through his fingers into perdition.
(2.) The ministry must be a source of weakness instead of power to the Church, if it is not in sympathy with the hearts of the people, and the souls of perishing men. He who was once lost but is found again, will know how to feel for the lost, and the lost will listen to him who once was lost himself. This is the natural power of the minister, the link of sympathy that binds him to the hearts of the people and the souls of men. If this be lost the ministry is powerless.
3. The third and principal element of the Churchs power is the Holy Ghost. The implement of the Churchs work is the Word; the arm of the Churchs power is the ministry; but the power itself is the Holy Ghost. As He causeth the earth to bring forth and bud by showers from heaven, so He causes His Church to abound in the fruits of righteousness by times of refreshing from on high. A revival is a day of the Spirits power, when the enemy is repulsed; when sinners are made willing; when doubt and unbelief are dissipated. If such a day of power were granted to us now, you would see rationalism, scepticism, and infidelity driven like smoke before the wind.

III. Such being the elements of the Churchs power, and the causes which convert its strength into weakness, let us now listen to Gods call to the Church to put on and put forth her strength. Awake, awake; put on thy strength, O Zion! An army puts on its strength when it goes forth to battle, but this is strength to destroy. A fireman puts on his strength when he enters a burning dwelling, and plucks its sleeping inmates from the flames. This is strength to save. Oh, it is a glorious thing to put on strength to save! How, then, shall we put on this strength?

Physical strength is put on in one way, and spiritual strength in another. Some seem to imagine that they have only to arouse and stir themselves into an agony of effort. Samson arose and shook himself, and thought he would go forth and smite the Philistines, as aforetime; but, alas! the strength was not thereit had departed from him. So the Church may shake herself and advance to the conflict, but the strength is not there; the Philistines are upon her, and she wists not that the Lord has departed. This is not the way! One who is physically strong is conscious of his strength, but one who is spiritually strong is conscious of nothing but weakness. Spiritual power, in its first element, is the sense of our own weakness.
No man ever puts on spiritual strength except on his knees. It was there that the apostles found it. When Peter stood forth and preached to the multitude, that day of Pentecost was a day of power; it was the Spirits power; but how did the apostles put it on? Upon their knees; in those days of prayer, in the upper chamber in Jerusalem. It is upon our knees that the Church must put on its strength! Then shall our work be mighty, through God, to the pulling down of strongholds.W. M. Paxton, D.D.

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

(20) As a wild bull . . .Better, as an antelope. The picture explains that of Isa. 51:17. The sons cannot help the mother, for they, too, have drunk of the same cup of fury, and lie like corpses in the open places of the city. (Comp. Lam. 2:12.)

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

Isa 51:20 Thy sons have fainted, they lie at the head of all the streets, as a wild bull in a net: they are full of the fury of the LORD, the rebuke of thy God.

Ver. 20. Thy sons have fainted. ] Fame, macie, tabe, vulnere, utterly disabled to relieve thee. Isa 51:18

As a wild bull in a net. ] Taken in a toil, where he struggles and strives, foams and fumes, but cannot get out.

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

Thy sons have fainted. Note the Alternation in this verse. Thus: “fainted at the head”, &c, and “they lie as a wild bull”, &c.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

sons: Isa 40:30, Jer 14:18, Lam 1:15, Lam 1:19, Lam 2:11, Lam 2:12, Lam 4:2, Lam 5:13

a wild: Isa 8:21, Eze 12:13, Eze 17:20, Rev 16:9-11

full: Isa 51:17, Isa 51:21, Isa 9:19-21, Psa 88:15, Psa 88:16, Lam 3:15, Lam 3:16, Rev 14:10, but, Isa 29:9, Isa 49:26, Eze 39:19

Reciprocal: Deu 28:20 – vexation 2Ki 3:10 – the Lord Psa 32:3 – roaring Psa 107:12 – he brought Isa 13:7 – shall all Isa 52:5 – make Isa 59:11 – roar Jer 31:18 – as a Jer 44:6 – my fury Lam 2:19 – that faint Lam 3:39 – a man Eze 33:10 – how Nah 1:2 – is furious

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

The children were just as helpless as the mother. In one sense Israel had no children to help her. This is one way of saying she could not help herself. But in another sense the children she did have, her descendants, could not help her either. The mother and her children are both figures of Israel. The children lay at major intersections of the city as exhausted as an antelope (oryx) caught in a net by its hunters. They too had suffered the wrath and rebuke of their God (cf. Isa 51:2; Isa 51:17).

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