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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 5:14

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 5:14

Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without measure: and their glory, and their multitude, and their pomp, and he that rejoiceth, shall descend into it.

14 17. A second threatening, in a sublime image, of the sudden destruction of Jerusalem. The transition to the fate of the capital is somewhat abrupt. 14. hell hath enlarged herself ] better, Sheol hath enlarged her appetite (Hab 2:5). Sheol, the Underworld, the realm of the dead (like the Greek Hades), is here, as elsewhere, conceived as a devouring insatiable monster; cf. Hos 13:14; Jon 2:2; Son 8:6; Pro 1:12; Pro 30:16.

and their glory descend into it ] Render (nearly as Cheyne) and down goes her (Jerusalem’s) pomp, and her tumult and her uproar and ( all) that is ( so) jubilant in her.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Therefore hell – The word transated hell, she‘ol, has not the same meaning that we now attach to that word; its usual signification, among the Hebrews, was the lower world, the region of departed spirits. It corresponded to the Greek Hades, hades, or place of the dead. This word occurs eleven times in the New Testament Mat 11:23; Mat 16:18; Luk 10:15; Luk 16:23; Act 2:27, Act 2:31; 1Co 15:55; Rev 1:18; Rev 6:8; Rev 20:13-14, in all of which places, except 1Co 15:55, it is rendered hell, though denoting, in most of those places, as it does in the Old Testament, the abodes of the dead. The Septuagint, in this place, and usually, translates the word she‘ol by Hades, Hades. It was represented by the Hebrews as low down, or deep in the earth – contrasted with the height of heaven; Deu 32:22; Job 11:8; Psa 139:7-8. It was a place where thick darkness reigns; Job 10:21-22 : The land of darkness and the shadow of death; a land of darkness, as darkness itself. It is described as having valleys, or depths, Pro 9:18. It is represented also as having gates, Isa 38:10; and as being inhabited by a great multitude, some of whom sit on thrones, occupied in some respects as they were on earth; see the note at Isa 14:9. And it is also said that the wicked descend into it by openings in the earth, as Korah, Dathan, and Abiram did; Num 15:30, … In this place, it means evidently the regions of the dead, without the idea of punishment; and the poetic representation is, that so many of the Jews would be cut off by famine, thirst, and the sword, that those vast regions would be obliged to enlarge themselves in order to receive them. It means, therefore, that while many of them would go into captivity Isa 5:13, vast multitudes of them would be cut off by famine, thirst, and the sword.

Opened her mouth – As if to absorb or consume them; as a cavern, or opening of the earth does; compare Num 16:30.

Without measure – Without any limit.

And their glory – All that they esteemed their pride and honor shall descend together into the yawning gulf.

Their multitude – The multitude of people; their vast hosts.

Their pomp – Noise, tumult; the bustle, and shouting, and display made in battle, or war, or victory; Isa 13:4; Amo 2:2; Hos 10:14.

And he that rejoiceth – All that the nation prided itself on, and all that was a source of joy, should be destroyed.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Isa 5:14-16

Hell hath enlarged herself . . . the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in Judgment

The grave

Hell, here, stands not for future punishment.

The word Sheol in Hebrew, Hades in Greek, and Hell in this verse, represent the place of the dead–the grave. This place of the dead is spoken of in the Bible as a very deep place (Deu 32:22; Job 11:8; Psa 139:7-8). As a very dark place (Job 10:21-22). And as a place having gates into it (Isa 38:10).


I.
THE GROWING POWER OF THE GRAVE. The grave is here represented as having enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without measure. The words refer, undoubtedly, to a period when, through famine, pestilence, or war, mortality was on the increase. This increase of mortality teaches us–

1. The fruitlessness of all human efforts to avert death. Men have been struggling against death for six thousand years, and his dominion is wider today than ever.

2. How soon we shall be in the grave world. The mouth is opening for us; it is yawning at our feet.


II.
THE LEVELLING POWER OF THE GRAVE. And their glory, and their multitude, and their pomp, and he that rejoiceth, shall descend into it. And the mean man shall be brought down, and the mighty man shall be humbled, and the eyes of the lofty shall be humbled. Learn from this–

1. How foolish it is to be proud of adventitious distinctions. They are only as flowers of the field, evanescent forms, and hues that variegate the common grass.

2. How important to seek an alliance with the eternally great and good. Seek a city which hath foundations, a kingdom that cannot be shaken.


III.
THE ETERNAL SOVEREIGN OF THE GRAVE. But the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgment, and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness.

1. He survives all dissolutions.

2. He will be increasingly honoured. The Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgment. (Homilist.)

Gods judgments on the Jews

This judgment began to come upon the men whom Isaiah addressed, in the reign of Ahaz, soon after the delivery of the warning; but in order fully to understand it, we must (as in the case of all other prophecies) look at it in the light of the whole subsequent history of the Jews and of Christendom. In the final destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, Christ and His apostles saw the selfish and carnal nation brought to its last trial and righteously condemned, and the sentence carried into execution by that Man whom God had appointed to judge the world. They declared, and the event, spread over successive centuries, has proved the truth of the declaration, that God was bringing down the mean man and the mighty man alike throughout the world and exalting Himself and His Son, setting His name up in the world, and causing it to triumph over all opposition. (Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)

God the righteous Judge

Though men may slavishly dread an arbitrary will, they can never feel for it that salutary tear which is the beginning of wisdom; and unless we believe that Gods judgments are righteous–that they are a part of the steady administration of a polity–as well as good in their effects, it will be impossible for us to keep long from superstition, or its opposite, scepticism. And, therefore, we may see the germ of a true historical and political philosophy in the prophets repeated assertion, that God is exalted in executing justice and sanctified in righteousness. (Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Hell; or, the grave, as this word most commonly signifies.

Opened her mouth without measure, to receive those vast numbers which shall die by this famine, or otherwise, as is here implied.

Their glory; their honourable men, as they were called, Isa 5:13, being distinguished both here and there from the multitude.

Their pomp; all their glory, shall die with them.

He that rejoiceth; that spendeth all his days in mirth and jollity, and casteth away all cares and fears.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

14. hellthe grave; Hebrew,sheol; Greek, hades; “the unseen world of spirits.” Nothere, “the place of torment.” Poetically, it is representedas enlarging itself immensely, in order to receive the countlesshosts of Jews, which should perish (Nu16:30).

theirthat is, of theJewish people.

he that rejoiceththedrunken reveller in Jerusalem.

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

Therefore hell hath enlarged herself,…. That is, the grave, to receive the dead which die with famine and thirst; signifying that the number of the dead would be so great, that the common burying places would not be sufficient to hold them; but additions must be made to them; or some vast prodigious pit must be dug, capable of receiving them; like Tophet, deep and large: or “hath enlarged her soul” d; her desire after the dead, see Hab 2:5 being insatiable, and one of those things which are never satisfied, or have enough,

Pr 30:15 wherefore it follows:

and opened her mouth without measure; immensely wide; there being no boundary to its desires, nor any end of its cravings, or of filling it. And so the Targum renders it, “without end”. Moreover, by “hell” may be meant the miserable estate and condition of the Jews upon the destruction of Jerusalem, when they were in the utmost distress and misery, [See comments on Lu 16:23].

And their glory; their glorious ones, their nobles, as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions; and the Targum, their princes, rulers, civil and ecclesiastical; which were the glory of the nation:

and their multitude; meaning the common people; or rather their great and honourable ones, as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions render the word; and in which sense it may be used in the preceding verse Isa 5:13; since not of the poor, but of the rich, the context speaks; even of such who indulged themselves in luxury and pleasure:

and their pomp; the Septuagint version, “their rich ones”; such who live in pomp and splendour: but the word e signifies noise and tumult; and so the Targum renders it; and it designs noisy and tumultuous ones, who sing and roar, halloo and make a noise at feasts; and who may be called , “sons of tumult”, or “tumultuous ones”; Jer 48:45 wherefore it follows:

and he that rejoiceth, that is, at their feasts,

shall descend into it; into hell, or the grave: or, “he that rejoiceth in it”, that is, in the land or city; so the Targum,

“he that is strong among them;”

so Jarchi and Kimchi interpret it.

d “dilatavit suam animam”, V. L. Munster, Montanus, Cocceius. e “et strepitus ejus”, Montanus, Forerius.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The threat of punishment commences again with “therefore;” it has not yet satisfied itself, and therefore grasps deeper still. “Therefore the under-world opens its jaws wide, and stretches open its mouth immeasurably wide; and the glory of Jerusalem descends, and its tumult, and noise, and those who rejoice within it.” The verbs which follow lacen (therefore) are prophetic preterites, as in Isa 5:13. The feminine suffixes attached to what the lower world swallows up do not refer to sheol (though this is construed more frequently, no doubt, as a feminine than as a masculine, as it is in Job 26:6), but, as expressed in the translation, to Jerusalem itself, which is also necessarily required by the last clause, “those who rejoice within it.” The withdrawal of the tone from to the penultimate (cf., C haphetz in Psa 18:20; Psa 22:9) is intentionally omitted, to cause the rolling and swallowing up to be heard as it were. A mouth is ascribed to the under-world, also a nephesh , i.e., a greedy soul, in which sense nephesh is then applied metonymically sometimes to a thirst for blood (Psa 27:12), and sometimes to simple greediness (Isa 56:11), and even, as in the present passage and Hab 2:5, to the throat or swallow which the soul opens “without measure,” when its craving knows no bounds ( Psychol. p. 204). It has become a common thing now to drop entirely the notion which formerly prevailed, that the noun sheol was derived from the verb shaal in the sense in which it was generally employed, viz., to ask or demand; but Caspari, who has revived it again, is certainly so far correct, that the derivation of the word which the prophet had in his mind was this and no other. The word sheol (an infinitive form, like pekod ) signifies primarily the irresistible and inexorable demand made upon every earthly thing; and then secondarily, in a local sense, the place of the abode of shades, to which everything on the surface of the earth is summoned; or essentially the divinely appointed curse which demands and swallows up everything upon the earth. We simply maintain, however, that the word sheol , as generally sued, was associated in thought with shaal , to ask or demand. Originally, no doubt, it may have been derived from the primary and more material idea of the verb , possibly from the meaning “to be hollow,” which is also assumed to be the primary meaning of .

(Note: The meaning “to be hollow” is not very firmly established, however; as the primary meaning of , and the analogy sometimes adduced of hell = hollow (Hlle = Hhle ), is a deceptive one, as Hlle (hell), to which Luther always gives the more correct form Helle, does not mean a hollow, but a hidden place (or a place which renders invisible: from hln , to conceal), Lat. celans (see Jtting, Bibl. Wrterbuch, 1864, pp. 85, 86). It is much more probable that the meaning of sheol is not the hollow place, but the depression or depth, from , which corresponds precisely to the Greek so far as its primary meaning is concerned (compare the talmud ic shilshel , to let down; shilshul , sinking or depression, Erubin 83b; shul , the foundation, fundus): see Hupfeld on Psa 6:6. Luzzatto on this passage also explains sheol as signifying depth, and compares the talmudic hishchil = heshil , to let down (or, according to others, to draw up – two meanings which may easily be combined in the same word, starting from its radical idea, which indicates in a general a loosening of the previous connection). Frst has also given up the meaning cavitas, a hollow, and endeavours to find a more correct explanation of the primary signification of sha’al (see at Isa 40:12).)

At any rate, this derivation answers to the view that generally prevailed in ancient times. According to the prevalent idea, Hades was in the interior of the earth. And there was nothing really absurd in this, since it is quite within the power and freedom of the omnipresent God to manifest Himself wherever and however He may please. As He reveals Himself above the earth, i.e., in heaven, among blessed spirits in the light of His love; so did He reveal Himself underneath the earth, viz., in Sheol , in the darkness and fire of His wrath. And with the exception of Enoch and Elijah, with their marvellous departure from this life, the way of every mortal ended there, until the time when Jesus Christ, having first paid the , i.e., having shed His blood, which covers our guilt and turns the wrath of God into love, descended into Hades and ascended into heaven, and from that time forth has changed the death of all believers from a descent into Hades into an ascension to heaven. But even under the Old Testament the believer may have known, that whoever hid himself on this side the grave in Jehovah the living One, would retain his eternal germ of life even in Sheol in the midst of the shades, and would taste the love of God even in the midst of wrath. It was this postulate of faith which lay at the foundation of the fact, that even under the Old Testament the broader and more comprehensive idea of Sheol began to be contracted into the more limited notion of hell (see Psychol. p. 415). This is the case in the passage before us, where Isaiah predicts of everything of which Jerusalem was proud, and in which it revelled, including the persons who rejoice din these things, a descent into Hades; just as the Korahite author of Ps 49 wrote (Psa 49:14) that the beauty of the wicked would be given up to Hades to be consumed, without having hereafter any place in the upper world, when the upright should have dominion over them in the morning. Hades even here is almost equivalent to the New Testament gehenna .

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

14. Therefore hell hath enlarged his soul (86) In this verse the Prophet intended to heighten the alarm of men who were at their ease, and not yet sufficiently affected by the threatenings which had been held out to them. Though it was shocking to behold captivity, and also famine, yet the slowness and insensibility of the people was so great that they did not give earnest heed to these tokens of God’s anger. Accordingly the Prophet threatens something still more dreadful, that hell has opened his belly to swallow them all up.

I said a little ago, that what is here stated in the past tense refers partly to the future. Nor is it without good reason that the Prophet speaks of the events as plain and manifest; for he intended to bring them immediately before the people, that they might behold with their eyes what they could not be persuaded to believe. Again, when he compares hell or the grave to an insatiable beast, by the soul he means the belly into which the food is thrown. The general meaning is, that the grave is like a wide and vast gulf, which, at the command of God, yawns to devour men who are condemned to die. This personification carries greater emphasis than if he had said that all are condemned to the grave.

And her glory hath descended, and her multitude. He joins together the nobles and men of low rank, that none may flatter themselves with the hope of escape: as if he had said, “ Death will carry you away, and all that you possess, your delicacies, wealth, pleasures, and everything else in which you place your confidence.” It is therefore a confirmation of the former statement, and we ought always to attend to the particle לכן ( laken,) therefore; for the people ascribed their calamities to fortune, or in some other way hardened themselves against the Lord’s chastisements. On this account Isaiah says that these things do not happen by chance. Besides, men are wont to argue with God, and are so daring and presumptuous that they do not hesitate to call him to account. In order, therefore, to restrain that pride, he shows that the punishments with which they are visited are just, and that it is owing entirely to their own folly that they are miserable in every respect.

(86) Therefore hell hath enlarged herself. — Eng. Ver.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

DEATH AND THE GRAVE
(For Easter Sunday.)

Isa. 5:14-15. Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, &c.

In these terms of appalling sublimity Isaiah warns his countrymen of the calamities that were about to come upon them, on account of the innumerable transgressions into which they had been betrayed by their wilful ignorance of God. Therefore they should be carried away into captivity (Isa. 5:13), and therefore also the sword, famine, and pestilence would conspire to fill the under-world with inhabitants. That under-world is represented as preparing itself for their reception, as a ravenous beast opens wide its jaws to devour its prey (Text). A prediction which, to the prosperous, wealthy, and powerful nation over which Uzziah ruled, doubtless seemed the most extravagant raving of fanaticism, but which was fulfilled nevertheless.

It is of the under-world that Isaiah speaks. Therefore the under-world opens its jaws wide, and stretches open its mouth immeasurably wide; and the glory of Jerusalem descends, and its tumult, and noise, and those who rejoice within it. There are mean men bowed down, and lords humbled, and the eyes of lofty men are humbled.Delitsch. Our translation hell must not lead us to think merely of the place where the wicked are tormented; it is of conquests about to be achieved by death and the grave that Isaiah warned the men of his time. His prediction suggests a topic of which men of all times will do well to think, and that again another topic peculiarly suited to this day. Let us bethink ourselves

I. Of THE CONQUESTS OF DEATH AND THE GRAVE.

I. These conquests have been effected in all ages. Generation after generation of mankind has been swept away by these grim and ancient warriors. During successive centuries men have gained wonderful power over the forces of nature, but they have acquired no real increase of ability to withstand these dread destroyers. All that science can do is in a few cases for a very short time to defer their victory. The Elixir of Life has been sought for in vain.If in feebleness of mankind we had not sufficient proof of our fallen condition, certainly we should find it in the fact, that so many men have allied themselves with these foes of our race. All nations have conferred their brightest honours on those who have been the most successful ministers of death. Warrior and hero have been regarded as synonymous terms. In no respect is modern science more industrious, earnest or successful, than in the search for the means by which human life may be destroyed most easily on the largest scale.

II. They have been characterised by a solemn impartiality. With them there has been no respect of persons.

(1.) Meanness is no security against them. Poverty and lowliness are not without their compensations, as the poorer Jews discovered, when they saw the nobles and men of wealth, whom they had been accustomed to envy, carried away miserable captives, while they themselves were left behind (2Ki. 24:14-16, &c). There are those whom human conquerors will not stoop to molest. But death and the grave have no such fastidiousness. They prey on the mean as well as the mighty.

(2.) Might is no defence against them. Rank and wealth can accomplish much, but they cannot overawe or bribe death [652] Death works like a reaper in the dark, cutting down the tall ears of corn as well as the grass that struggles for existence between them, the fair flowers as well as the noisome weeds.

[652] Look how easily Jehu stamped Jezebel in pieces, and Tamerlanes troops of horse the Turkish footmen; or as the sturdy steed dashes out the little whappets brains, so easily does Death, with the least kick and spurn of his heel, the halest complexion, the stoutest constitution,triumphing like an emperor over all sorts of people; treading on the necks of kings and princes, as Joshua over them in the cave; insulting in the terms of Rabshakeh: Where is Hamath? the kings of Arphad, Ivah, and Sepharvaim? Elam, Meshach, and Tubal, whose fear was upon the living, are they not descended into the grave? made their beds in the slimy valley, and laid their swords under their heads? Hath wisdom delivered, strength rescued, or wealth rescued any out my fingers?Ward, 15771639.

Oh, eloquent, just, and mighty Death! whom none could advise, thou hast persuaded; what none hath dared, thou hast done; and whom all the world has flattered, thou alone hast cast out of the world and despised. Thou hast drawn together all the far-stretched greatness, all the pride, cruelty, and ambition of man, and covered it all with those two narrow words, Hic jacet.Sir Walter Raleigh.

III. They have been characterised by a terrible unexpectedness. They are certain, but they cannot be foreseen. While they proceed with all the steadiness of gravitation, it is as impossible to foretell where they will be next accomplished, as it is to predict from which part of the heavens the next flash of lightning will burst forth, on which spot of earth the destructive fire will fall. Hence the wisdom of living in continual preparedness for the great change which will come to us all [655]

[655] We put far away the evil day, and therefore we are not duly impressed by the thought. But fourscore years are soon cut off, and we fly away; and how uncertain is our reaching that lonely verge of life, where the flowery meadows and the golden corn-fields slope gradually down into the bare and stony beach that fringes the eternal sea. The coast of death to most is an abrupt precipice; we are cut off in the midst of our days.Macmillan.

Why should a man defer that which ought to be the occupation of a life, which ought to command all his powers in all their vigourwhy should a man defer that to the last few abrupt moments, to his departure from time to eternity? When a man is going to any distant part of the globesay to Americawhat preparation there is! How much it is talked about! It is a long, a distant, an eventful journey. The man talks about it; his friends prepare in every conceivable way. Oh, what infatuation and stupidity, what folly it is for a man to make no preparation for this distant voyagethe voyage to eternity!Beaumont.

II. This survey of the conquests of death and the grave should remind us that there is another side to this solemn theme, and therefore I proceed to remind you, secondly, of THE CONQUERORS OF DEATH AND THE GRAVE. Through how many centuries did men live without any conception that these conquerors of our race might themselves be subjugated! Two astonishing events, indeed, occurredthe translation of Enoch and the rapture of Elijahbut their significance could not be fully understood at the time of their occurrence. The data for their complete interpretation had not then been furnished. But when that supreme event which we commemorate to-day occurred, these and many other mysteries were solved. When the Son of man, who had been crucified, emerged from the tomb, proclamation was made to the universe that the ancient power of death and the grave was broken. It was seen that it is possible to pass through them unharmed, and to return to the activities of life, not with diminished, but with increased, vigour. And He who demonstrated this astonishing truth has pledged Himself to accomplish for all who trust in Him a victory similar to His own. By faith in this pledge, countless millions have been enabled to triumph in spirit over Death at the very moment when he seemed to be numbering them also among his victims (1Co. 15:55-57).

I. The victory of Christs followers over death and the grave is real. There seems to be one event unto all (Ecc. 9:2-3). But it is not so. Death is not the conqueror of Christs servants; he is Gods servant, sent to conduct them to the rest prepared for them. The grave is not their prison, but a quiet resting-place from which presently the mortal body shall come forth immortal to greet the eternal morning.

II. The victory of Christs followers over death and the grave will ere long be manifest (1Th. 4:14-16, &c.) In the doctrine of the resurrection, there is much that is mysterious and inexplicable, but this is certain, that the seeming victory of death and the grave over Christs followers shall be utterly reversed; as not a hoof belonging to Gods ancient people was left behind in Egypt, so NOTHING that belongs to a single follower of Christ upon which death and the grave have seized shall remain in their power (Hos. 13:14). The resurrection will be more than a ransom. It will be a development (1Co. 15:37-38; 1Co. 15:42; 1Co. 15:44). In view of these truths, let us to-day keep Easter with thankful and joyful hearts.

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

(14) Therefore hell hath enlarged herself.The Hebrew Sheol, or Hades, like hell itself in its original meaning, expressed not a place of torment, but the vast shadow world of death, thought of as being below the earth (Psa. 16:10; Psa. 49:14). Here, as elsewhere (Jon. 2:2; Pro. 1:12; Pro. 30:16), it is half-personified, as Hades and Death are in Rev. 6:8; Rev. 20:13-14. In that unseen world there were, in the later belief of Judaism, the two regions of Gehenna and of Eden or Paradise. What the prophet says is that all the pomp and glory of the rich oppressors are on their way to that inevitable doom. The word for glory (as in 1Sa. 4:22) is the same as that for honourable men in Isa. 5:13, so that the original has all the emphasis of repetition.

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

14, 15. Hell In the Hebrew, sheol, to which, in the New Testament, the corresponding term is hades. The term sheol never means the grave, but always the invisible domain of the dead, whether referring to souls, as usually, or to bodies. See Dr. Burr’s Excursus on Job 7:21. The famished multitudes are making sheol populous with newly departed ones. Hence, enlarged herself means “enlarged” her capacity; and without measure imports ambition for more extensive limits than are decreed to her. Their glory multitude pomp, etc. The pronoun “their” doubtless refers to Jerusalem, the fallen Zion, and the nouns belonging to it are the noisy, revelling inhabitants thereof. The common mass, mean mighty lofty, are seen tumbling daily into sheol together. Chap. 14, where see notes.

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

Isa 5:14 Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without measure: and their glory, and their multitude, and their pomp, and he that rejoiceth, shall descend into it.

Ver. 14. Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, &c. ] To swallow up those insatiable helluones and lurcones, drunkards and epicures; these swill howls and sensualists, Cerberi instar, triaguttura pandebant. Diotimus of Athens was surnamed Tunbowl, and young Cicero, Tricongius, because he could take off three bottles of wine at a draught. Therefore death and hell

Have opened their mouth without measure. ] Hiante rictu amplissimo helluones istos absorbere, To devour such pests and botches of mankind. Oh that the carousers were persuaded, as Mohammed told his followers, that in every grape there dwelt a devil! And oh that they would foresee and prevent a worse punishment in hell than befell that poor Turk who, being found drunk, had a ladleful of boiling lead poured down his throat by the command of a certain pasha!

And their glory. ] Their great ones, those men of honour. Isa 5:13

And their multitude. ] The meaner sort. Nos numeri sumus.

And their pomp. ] Or, Their noise or tumult: their revel rout, as they call it, when they have drunk all the outs, and are now singing and hallooing.

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

hell = Sheol. App-35.

enlarged. Figure of speech Prosopopoeia. App-6.

herself. = her soul. Hebrew. nephesh. App-13.

her. All these feminine pronouns-mean that the nouns belong to Sheol.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

hell Heb. “Sheol,” (See Scofield “Hab 2:5”).

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

hell: Isa 14:9, Isa 30:33, Psa 49:14, Pro 27:20, Eze 32:18-30, Hab 2:5, Mat 7:13, Rev 20:13-15

opened: Num 16:30-34, Pro 1:12

he that rejoiceth: Isa 21:4, 1Sa 25:36-38, 2Sa 13:28, 2Sa 13:29, Psa 55:15, Dan 5:3-6, Dan 5:30, Nah 1:10, Luk 12:19, Luk 12:20, Luk 16:20-23, Luk 17:27, Luk 21:34, Act 12:21-23

Reciprocal: Gen 31:1 – glory Num 16:32 – the earth Psa 9:17 – The wicked Psa 16:10 – my Psa 49:17 – his Isa 10:3 – where Lam 1:10 – spread Eze 7:12 – for Eze 7:24 – I will also Luk 4:6 – and the Luk 10:15 – thrust Act 25:23 – with

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

5:14 Therefore {u} hell hath enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without measure: and their glory, and their multitude, and their pomp, and he that rejoiceth, shall descend into it.

(u) Meaning, the grave will swallow up them who will die for hunger and thirst, and yet for all this great destruction it will never be satisfied.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Instead of pleasure-seekers opening their throats to drink wine, Sheol (the place of the dead) would open her throat to drink down the pleasure-seekers. This divine punishment would befall all the people because they shared the pride that marked the property-hungry and the pleasure-mad (cf. Isa 2:9). The offenders’ actions showed that they really did not know Yahweh in any life-changing way; the knowledge of God had had no practical effect on the way they lived.

"The word sheol (an infinitive form, like pekod) signified primarily the irresistible and inexorable demand made upon every earthly thing; and then secondarily, in a local sense, the place of the abode of shades, to which everything on the surface of the earth is summoned; or essentially the divinely appointed curse which demands and swallows up everything upon the earth." [Note: Delitzsch, 1:172.]

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