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Sermons for Preaching

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Verse 1

Isaiah is outside, near the altar in front of the temple. The doors are supposed to open, and the veil hiding the Holy of Holies to be withdrawn, unfolding to his view a vision of God represented as an Eastern monarch, attended by seraphim as His ministers of state (1 Kings 22:19), and with a robe and flowing train (a badge of dignity in the East), which filled the temple. This assertion that he had seen God was, according to tradition (not sanctioned by Isaiah 1:1; see on Introduction), the pretext for sawing him asunder in Manasseh‘s reign (Hebrews 11:37). Visions often occur in the other prophets: in Isaiah there is only this one, and it is marked by characteristic clearness and simplicity.

In  …  year  …  Uzziah died — Either literal death, or civil when he ceased as a leper to exercise his functions as king [Chaldee], (2 Chronicles 26:19-21). 754 b.c. [Calmet] 758 (Common Chronology). This is not the first beginning of Isaiah‘s prophecies, but his inauguration to a higher degree of the prophetic office: Isaiah 6:9, etc., implies the tone of one who had already experience of the people‘s obstinacy.

Lord — here Adonai, Jehovah in Isaiah 6:5; Jesus Christ is meant as speaking in Isaiah 6:10, according to John 12:41. Isaiah could only have “seen” the Son, not the divine essence (John 1:18). The words in Isaiah 6:10 are attributed by Paul (Acts 28:25, Acts 28:26) to the Holy Ghost. Thus the Trinity in unity is implied; as also by the thrice “Holy” (Isaiah 6:3). Isaiah mentions the robes, temple, and seraphim, but not the form of God Himself. Whatever it was, it was different from the usual Shekinah: that was on the mercy seat, this on a throne; that a cloud and fire, of this no form is specified: over that were the cherubim, over this the seraphim; that had no clothing, this had a flowing robe and train.

Verse 2

stood — not necessarily the posture of standing; rather, were in attendance on Him [Maurer], hovering on expanded wings.

the — not in the Hebrew.

seraphim — nowhere else applied to God‘s attendant angels; but to the fiery flying (not winged, but rapidly moving) serpents, which bit the Israelites (Numbers 21:6), called so from the poisonous inflammation caused by their bites. Seraph is to burn; implying the burning zeal, dazzling brightness (2 Kings 2:11; 2 Kings 6:17; Ezekiel 1:13; Matthew 28:3) and serpent-like rapidity of the seraphim in God‘s service. Perhaps Satan‘s form as a serpent ({(nachash}) in his appearance to man has some connection with his original form as a seraph of light. The head of the serpent was the symbol of wisdom in Egypt (compare Numbers 21:8; 2 Kings 18:4). The seraphim, with six wings and one face, can hardly be identified with the cherubim, which had four wings (in the temple only two) and four faces (Ezekiel 1:5-12). (But compare Revelation 4:8). The “face” and “feet” imply a human form; something of a serpentine form (perhaps a basilisk‘s head, as in the temples of Thebes) may have been mixed with it: so the cherub was compounded of various animal forms. However, seraph may come from a root meaning “princ)ely,” applied in Daniel 10:13 to Michael [Maurer]; just as cherub comes from a root (changing m into b), meaning “noble.”

twain — Two wings alone of the six were kept ready for instant flight in God‘s service; two veiled their faces as unworthy to look on the holy God, or pry into His secret counsels which they fulfilled (Exodus 3:6; Job 4:18; Job 15:15); two covered their feet, or rather the whole of the lower parts of their persons - a practice usual in the presence of Eastern monarchs, in token of reverence (compare Ezekiel 1:11, their bodies). Man‘s service a fortiori consists in reverent waiting on, still more than in active service for, God.

Verse 3

(Revelation 4:8). The Trinity is implied (on “Lord,” see on Isaiah 6:1). God‘s holiness is the keynote of Isaiah‘s whole prophecies.

whole earth — the Hebrew more emphatically, the fulness of the whole earth is His glory (Psalm 24:1; Psalm 72:19).

Verse 4

door — rather, foundations of the thresholds.

house — temple.

smoke — the Shekinah cloud (1 Kings 8:10; Ezekiel 10:4).

Verse 5

undone — (Exodus 33:20). The same effect was produced on others by the presence of God (Judges 6:22; Judges 13:22; Job 42:5, Job 42:6; Luke 5:8; Revelation 1:17).

lips — appropriate to the context which describes the praises of the lips, sung in alternate responses (Exodus 15:20, Exodus 15:21; Isaiah 6:3) by the seraphim: also appropriate to the office of speaking as the prophet of God, about to be committed to Isaiah (Isaiah 6:9).

seen — not strictly Jehovah Himself (John 1:18; 1 Timothy 6:16), but the symbol of His presence.

Lord — Hebrew, “Jehovah.”

Verse 6

unto me — The seraph had been in the temple, Isaiah outside of it.

live coal — literally, “a hot stone,” used, as in some countries in our days, to roast meat with, for example, the meat of the sacrifices. Fire was a symbol of purification, as it takes the dross out of metals (Malachi 3:2, Malachi 3:3).

the altar — of burnt offering, in the court of the priests before the temple. The fire on it was at first kindled by God (Leviticus 9:24), and was kept continually burning.

Verse 7

lips — (See on Isaiah 6:5). The mouth was touched because it was the part to be used by the prophet when inaugurated. So “tongues of fire” rested on the disciples (Acts 2:3, Acts 2:4) when they were being set apart to speak in various languages of Jesus.

iniquity — conscious unworthiness of acting as God‘s messenger.

purged — literally, “covered,” that is, expiated, not by any physical effect of fire to cleanse from sin, but in relation to the altar sacrifices, of which Messiah, who here commissions Isaiah, was in His death to be the antitype: it is implied hereby that it is only by sacrifice sin can be pardoned.

Verse 8

us — The change of number indicates the Trinity (compare Genesis 1:26; Genesis 11:7). Though not a sure argument for the doctrine, for the plural may indicate merely majesty, it accords with that truth proved elsewhere.

Whom  …  who — implying that few would be willing to bear the self-denial which the delivering of such an unwelcome message to the Jews would require on the part of the messenger (compare 1 Chronicles 29:5).

Here am I — prompt zeal, now that he has been specially qualified for it (Isaiah 6:7; compare 1 Samuel 3:10, 1 Samuel 3:11; Acts 9:6).

Verse 9

indeed — Hebrew, “In hearing hear,” that is, Though ye hear the prophet‘s warnings again and again, ye are doomed, because of your perverse will (John 7:17), not to understand. Light enough is given in revelation to guide those sincerely seeking to know, in order that they may do, God‘s will; darkness enough is left to confound the willfully blind (Isaiah 43:8). So in Jesus‘ use of parables (Matthew 13:14).

see  …  indeed — rather, “though ye see again and again,” yet, etc.

Verse 10

fat — (Psalm 119:17). “Render them the more hardened by thy warnings” [Maurer]. This effect is the fruit, not of the truth in itself, but of the corrupt state of their hearts, to which God here judicially gives them over (Isaiah 63:17). Gesenius takes the imperatives as futures. “Proclaim truths, the result of which proclamation will be their becoming the more hardened” (Romans 1:28; Ephesians 4:18); but this does not so well as the former set forth God as designedly giving up sinners to judicial hardening (Romans 11:8; 2 Thessalonians 2:11). In the first member of the sentence, the order is, the heart, ears, eyes; in the latter, the reverse order, the eyes, ears, heart. It is from the heart that corruption flows into the ears and eyes (Mark 7:21, Mark 7:22); but through the eyes and ears healing reaches the heart (Romans 10:17), [Bengel]. (Jeremiah 5:21; Ezekiel 12:2; Zechariah 7:11; Acts 7:57; 2 Timothy 4:4). In Matthew 13:15, the words are quoted in the indicative, “is waxed gross” (so the Septuagint), not the imperative, “make fat”; God‘s word as to the future is as certain as if it were already fulfilled. To see with one‘s eyes will not convince a will that is opposed to the truth (compare John 11:45, John 11:46; John 12:10, John 12:11). “One must love divine things in order to understand them” [Pascal].

be healed — of their spiritual malady, sin (Isaiah 1:6; Psalm 103:3; Jeremiah 17:14).

Verse 11

how long — will this wretched condition of the nation being hardened to its destruction continue?

until — (Isaiah 5:9) - fulfilled primarily at the Babylonish captivity, and more fully at the dispersion under the Roman Titus.

Verse 12

(2 Kings 25:21).

forsaking — abandonment of dwellings by their inhabitants (Jeremiah 4:29).

Verse 13

be eaten — Rather, “but it shall be again given over to be consumed”: if even a tenth survive the first destruction, it shall be destroyed by a second (Isaiah 5:25; Ezekiel 5:1-5, Ezekiel 5:12), [Maurer and Horsley]. In English Version, “return” refers to the poor remnant left in the land at the Babylonish captivity (2 Kings 24:14; 2 Kings 25:12), which afterwards fled to Egypt in fear (2 Kings 25:26), and subsequently returned thence along with others who had fled to Moab and Edom (Jeremiah 40:11, Jeremiah 40:12), and suffered under further divine judgments.

tell — rather, “terebinth” or “turpentine tree” (Isaiah 1:29).

substance  …  when  …  cast  …  leaves — rather, “As a terebinth or oak in which, when they are cast down (not ‹cast their leaves,‘ Job 14:7), the trunk or stock remains, so the holy seed (Ezra 9:2) shall be the stock of that land.” The seeds of vitality still exist in both the land and the scattered people of Judea, waiting for the returning spring of God‘s favor (Romans 11:5, Romans 11:23-29). According to Isaiah, not all Israel, but the elect remnant alone, is destined to salvation. God shows unchangeable severity towards sin, but covenant faithfulness in preserving a remnant, and to it Isaiah bequeaths the prophetic legacy of the second part of his book (the fortieth through sixty-sixth chapters).

 


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