PROPHESIED 740-701 B.C.
To understand the mission of Isaiah,
one should be familiar with the history of the kingdom
of Judah from the time of Jeroboam, founder of the
separate kingdom of Israel, to that of Uzziah, in whose
reign Isaiah was born, 760 B.C.
Judah had doubtless degenerated in
virtue and spiritual life, but this degeneracy was
not so marked as that of the northern kingdom, called
Israel. Judah had been favored by a succession
of kings, most of whom were able and good men.
Out of nine kings, five of them “did right in
the sight of the Lord;” and during the two hundred
and sixteen years when these monarchs reigned, one
hundred and eighty-seven were years when the worship
of Jehovah was maintained by virtuous princes, all
of whom were of the house of David. The reigns
of those kings who did evil in the sight of the Lord
were short.
During this period there were nineteen
kings of Israel, most of whom did evil. They
introduced idolatry; many of them were usurpers, and
died violent deaths. If the northern kingdom
was larger and more fertile than the southern, it
was more afflicted with disastrous wars and divine
judgments for the sins into which it had fallen.
It was to the wicked kings of Israel, throned in the
Samarian Shechem, that Elijah and Elisha were sent;
and the interest we feel in their reigns is chiefly
directed to the acts and sayings of those two great
prophets.
The kingdom of Judah, blessed on the
whole with virtuous rulers, and comparatively free
from idolatry, continually increased in wealth and
political power. Rehoboam, the son of Solomon,
after the rebellion of the ten tribes, seems to have
changed somewhat his course of life, although the
high places and graven images were not removed; but
his grandson Asa destroyed the idols, and made fortunate
alliances. Asa’s son Jehoshaphat terminated
the civil wars that had raged between Judah and Israel
from the accession of Rehoboam, and almost rivalled
Solomon in his outward prosperity. Jerusalem
became the strongest fortress in western Asia; the
Temple service was continued in its former splendor;
all that was vital in the strength of nations pertained
to the smaller kingdom. The dark spot in the
history of Judah for nearly two hundred years was
the ascendency gained by Athaliah, the daughter of
Jezebel, over her husband Jehoram, who introduced
the gods of Phoenicia. She seems to have exercised
the same malign influence in Jerusalem that Jezebel
did in Samaria, and was as unscrupulous as her pagan
mother. She even succeeded in usurping the throne,
and in destroying the whole race of David, with the
exception of Joash, an infant, whom Jehoiada the high-priest
contrived to hide until the unscrupulous Athaliah was
slain, having reigned as queen six years, the
first instance in Jewish history of a female sovereign.
Both Judah and Israel in these years
had the danger of a Syrian war constantly threatening
them. Under Hazael, who reigned at Damascus,
great conquests were made by the Syrians of Jewish
territory, and the capture of Jerusalem was averted
only by buying off the enemy, to whom were surrendered
the gifts to the Temple accumulating since the days
of Jehoshaphat. The whole land was overrun and
pillaged. Nor were calamities confined to the
miseries of war. A long drouth burned the fields;
seed rotted under the clods; the cattle moaned in the
barren and dried-up pastures; while locusts devoured
what the drouth had spared. Says Stanley:
“The purple vine, the green fig-tree, the gray
olive, the scarlet pomegranate, the golden corn, the
waving palm, the fragrant citron, vanished before
them, and the trunks and branches were left bare and
white by their devouring teeth,” a
brilliant sentence, by the way, which Geikie quotes
without acknowledgment, as well as many others, which
lays him open to the charge of plagiarism. Both
Stanley and Geikie, however, seem to be indebted to
Ewald for all that is striking and original in their
histories, so true is Solomon’s saying
that there is nothing new under the sun. The
rarest thing in literature is a truly original history.
In this mournful crisis the prophet
Joel, who was a priest at Jerusalem, demanded a solemn
fast, which the entire kingdom devoutly celebrated,
the whole body of the priests crying aloud before the
gates of the Temple, “Spare Thy people, O Lord!
give not Thine heritage to reproach, lest the heathen
make us a by-word, and ask, Where is now thy God?”
But Joel, the oldest, and in many respects the most
eloquent, Hebrew prophet whose utterances have come
down to us, did not speak in vain, and a great religious
revival followed, attended naturally by renewed prosperity, for
among the Jews a “revival of religion”
meant a practical return from vice to virtue, personal
holiness, and the just and wholesome requirements
of their law; so that “under Amaziah, Uzziah,
and Jotham, Judah rose once more to a pitch of honor
and glory which almost recalled the golden age of
David.”
A greater power than that of Syria
threatened the peace and welfare of the kingdom of
Judah, as it also did that of Israel; and this was
the empire of Assyria. During the reigns of David
and Solomon this empire was passing through so many
disasters that it was not regarded as dangerous, and
both of the Jewish kingdoms were left free to avail
themselves of every facility afforded for national
development. Ewald notices emphatically this
outward prosperity, which introduced luxury and pride
throughout the kingdom. It was the golden age
of merchants, usurers, and money-mongers. Then
appeared that extraordinary greed for riches which
never afterward left the nation, even in seasons of
calamity, and which is the most striking peculiarity
of the modern Hebrew. This was a period not only
of prosperity and luxury, but of vanity and ostentation,
especially among women. The insidious influences
of wealth more than balanced the good effected by a
long succession of virtuous and gifted princes.
I read of no country that, on the whole, was ever
favored by a more remarkable constellation of absolute
kings than that of Judah. Most of them had long
reigns, took prophets and wise men for their counsellors,
developed the resources of their kingdoms, strengthened
Jerusalem, avoided entangling wars, and enjoyed the
love and veneration of the people. Most of them,
unlike the kings of Israel, were true to their exalted
mission, were loyal to Jehovah, and discouraged idolatry,
if they did not root out the scandal by persecuting
violence. Some of these kings were poets, and
others were saints, like their great ancestor David;
and yet, in spite of all their efforts, corruption,
and infidelity gained ground, and ultimately undermined
the state and prepared the way for Babylonian conquests.
Though Jerusalem survived the fall of Samaria for nearly
five generations, divine judgment was delayed, but
not withdrawn. The chastisement was sent at last
at the hands of warriors whom no nation could successfully
resist.
The old enemies who had in the early
days overwhelmed the Hebrews with calamities under
the Judges had been conquered by Saul and David, the
Moabites, the Edomites, the Hittites, the
Jebusites, and the Philistines, and they
never afterward seriously menaced the kingdom, although
there were occasional wars. But in the eighth
century before Christ the Assyrian empire, whose capital
was Nineveh, had become very formidable under warlike
sovereigns, who aimed to extend their dominion to
the Mediterranean and to Egypt. In the reign of
Jehoash, the son of Athaliah, an Assyrian monarch
had exacted tribute from Tyre and Sidon, and Syria
was overrun. When Pul, or Tiglath-pileser, seized
the throne of Nineveh, he pushed his conquests to
the Caspian Sea on the north and the Indus on the
east, to the frontier of Egypt and the deserts of Sinai
on the west and south. In 739 B.C. he appeared
in Syria to break up a confederation which Uzziah
of Judah had formed to resist him, and succeeded in
destroying the power of Syria, and carrying its people
as captives to Assyria. Menahem, king of Samaria,
submitted to the enormous tribute of one thousand
talents of silver. In 733 B.C. this great conqueror
again invaded Syria, beheaded Rezin its king, took
Damascus, reduced five hundred and eighteen cities
and towns to ashes, and carried back to Nineveh an
immense spoil. In 728 B.C. Shalmanezer IV.
appeared in Palestine, and invested Samaria.
The city made an heroic defence; but after a siege
of three years it yielded to Sargon, who carried away
into captivity the ten tribes of Israel, from which
they never returned.
Judah survived by reason of its greater
military skill and its strong fortresses, with which
Asa, Jehoshaphat, and Uzziah had fortified the country,
especially Jerusalem. But the fate of western
Asia was sealed when Rezin of Damascus, Menahem of
Samaria, Hiram of Tyre, and the king of Hamath moodily
consented to pay tribute to the king of Assyria; the
downfall of the sturdy Judah was in preparation.
Greater evils than those of war threatened
the stability of the state. In Judah as in Ephraim
drunkenness was a national vice, and the nobles abandoned
themselves to disgraceful debauchery. There was
a general demoralization of the people more fearful
in its consequences than even idolatry. Judah
was no exception to the ordinary fate of nations; the
everlasting sequence pertaining to institutions
as well as nations, to religious as well as merely
political communities was here seen, “Inwardness,
outwardness, worldliness, and rottenness.”
It was in this state of political
danger and a general decline in morals, with a tendency
to idolatry, that Isaiah preacher, statesman,
historian, poet, and prophet was born.
Less is said of the personal history
of this great man than of Moses or David, of Daniel
or Elisha, and it is only in his writings that we see
the solemn grandeur of his character. We infer
that he was allied with the royal family of David;
he certainly held a high position in the courts of
Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. He was a man of great
dignity, experience, and wisdom, but ascetic in his
habits and dress. Although he associated with
the great in courts and palaces, a cell was his delight.
He was a retiring, contemplative, rapt, austere man,
severe on passing follies, and not sparing in his
rebukes of sin in high places, something
like Savonarola at Florence, both as preacher and
prophet, and exercising a commanding influence
on political affairs and on the people directly, especially
during the reigns of Ahaz and Hezekiah. He denounced
woes and calamities, yet escaped persecution from
the grandeur of his character and the importance of
his utterances. He was a favorite of King Hezekiah,
and was contemporary with the prophets Hosea, Amos,
and Jonah. He lived in Jerusalem, not far from
the Temple, and had a wife and two sons. He wrote
the life of Uzziah, and died at the age of eighty-four,
in the reign of Manasseh. It is generally supposed
that although Isaiah had lived in honor during the
reigns of four kings, he suffered martyrdom at last.
It is the fate of prophets to be stoned when they
are in antagonism with men in power, or with popular
sentiments. His prophetic ministry extended over
a period of about fifty years, and he was continually
consulted by the reigning monarchs.
The great outward events that took
place during Isaiah’s public career were the
invasion of Judah by the combined forces of Israel
and Syria in the reign of Ahaz, and the great Assyrian
invasion in the reign of Hezekiah.
In regard to the first, it was disastrous
to Judah. The weak king, the twelfth from David,
was inclined to the idolâtries of the surrounding
nations, but was not signally bad like Ahab. Yet
he was no match for Pekah, who reigned at Samaria,
or for Rezin, who reigned at Damascus. Their
combined armies slew in one day one hundred and twenty
thousand of the subjects of Ahaz, and carried away
into captivity two hundred thousand women and children,
with immense spoil. The conqueror then advanced
to the siege of Jerusalem. In his distress Ahaz
invoked the aid of Pul, or Tiglath-pileser II., one
of the most warlike of the Assyrian kings, whose kingdom
stretched from the Armenian mountains on the north
to Bagdad on the south, and from the Zagros chain on
the east to the Euphrates on the west. Earnestly
did the prophet-statesman expostulate with Ahaz, telling
him that the king of Assyria would prove “a razor
to shave but too clean his desolate land.”
The inspired advice was rejected; and the result of
the alliance was that Judah, like Israel, fell to
the rank of a subject nation, and became tributary
to Assyria, and Ahaz, a mere vassal of Tiglath-pileser.
The whole of Palestine became the border-land of the
Assyrian empire, easy to be invaded and liable to
be conquered.
The consequences which Isaiah feared,
took place in the time of Hezekiah, in the actual
invasion of Judah by the Assyrian hosts under Sennacherib.
Not the splendid prosperity of Hezekiah, little short
of that enjoyed by Solomon, not his allegiance
to Jehovah, nor his grand reforms and magnificent
feasts averted the calamities which were the legitimate
result of the blindness of his father Ahaz. Sennacherib,
the most powerful of all the Assyrian kings, after
suppressing a revolt in Babylon and conquering various
Eastern states, turned his eyes and steps to Palestine,
which had revolted. Hezekiah, in mortal fear,
made humble submission, and consented to a tribute
of three hundred talents of silver and thirty of gold,
and the loss of two hundred thousand of his people
as captives, and a cession of a part of his territory, as
great a calamity as France suffered in the war (1870-71)
with Prussia. Considering the prosperity of the
kingdom of Judah under Hezekiah, it is a difficult
thing to be explained that the king could raise but
three hundred talents of silver and thirty of gold,
although David had contributed out of his private
fortune, for the future erection of the Temple, three
thousand talents of gold and seven thousand talents
of silver, besides the one million talents of silver
and one hundred thousand talents of gold which he
collected as sovereign. It would seem probable
that an error has crept into the estimates of the wealth
of the kingdom under Solomon and under the subsequent
kings; either that of Solomon is exaggerated, or that
of Hezekiah is underrated.
Notwithstanding his former defeat
and losses, Hezekiah again revolted, and again was
Judah invaded by a still greater Assyrian force.
The king of Judah in this emergency showed extraordinary
energy, stopped the supply of water outside his capital,
strengthened his defences, gathered together his fighting
men, and encouraged them with the assurance that help
would come from the Lord, in whom they trusted, and
whom Sennacherib boastfully defied. For the ringing
words of Isaiah roused and animated the hearts of
both king and people to a noble courage, announcing
the aid of Jehovah and the overthrow of the heathen
invader. As we have seen, the men of Judah showed
their faith in the divine help by preparing to help
themselves. But from an unexpected quarter the
assistance came, as Isaiah had predicted. A pestilence
destroyed in a single night one hundred and eighty-five
thousand of the Assyrian warriors, the
most signal overthrow of the enemies of Israel since
Pharaoh and his host were swallowed up by the waters
of the Red Sea, and also the most signal deliverance
which Jerusalem ever had. The calamity created
such a fearful demoralization among the invaders that
the over-confident Assyrian monarch retired to his
capital with utter loss of prestige, and soon after
was assassinated by his own sons. No Assyrian
king after this invaded Judah, and Nineveh itself in
a few years was conquered by Babylon.
The fall of Jerusalem at the hands
of the Babylonians was delayed one hundred years.
But such were the moral and social evils of the times
succeeding the Ninevite invasion that Isaiah saw that
retribution would come sooner or later, unless the
nation repented and a radical reform should take place.
He saw the people stricken with judicial blindness;
so he clothed himself in sackcloth and cried aloud,
with fervid eloquence, upon the people to repent.
He is now the popular preacher, and his theme is repentance.
In his earnest exhortations he foreshadows John the
Baptist: “Unless ye repent, ye shall all
likewise perish.” It would seem that Savonarola
makes him the model of his own eloquence. “Thy
crimes, O Florence! thy crimes, O Rome! thy crimes,
O Italy! are the causes of these chastisements.
O Rome! thou shalt be put to the sword, since thou
wilt not be converted! O harlot Church! I
will stretch forth mine hand upon thee, saith the
Lord.” The burden of the soul of the Florentine
monk is sin, especially sin in high places. He
sees only degeneracy in life, and alarms the people
by threats of divine vengeance. So Isaiah cries
aloud upon the people to seek the Lord while he may
be found. He does not invoke divine wrath, as
David did upon his enemies; but he shows that this
wrath will surely overtake the sinner. In no
respect does he glory in this retribution: he
is sad; he is oppressed; he is filled with grief,
especially in view of the prevailing infatuation.
“My people,” said he, “do not consider.”
He denounces all classes alike, and spares not even
women. In sarcastic language he rebukes their
love of dress, their abandonment to vanities, their
finery, their very gait and mincing attitude.
Still more contemptuously does the preacher speak
of the men, over whom the women rule and children
oppress. He is severe on corrupt judges, on usurers;
on all who are conceited in their own eyes; on those
who are mighty to drink wine; on those who join house
to house and field to field; on those whose glorious
beauty is a fading flower; on those who call good evil
and evil good, that put darkness for light, that take
away the righteousness of the righteous from him.
His terrible denunciation and enumeration of evil
indicate a very lax morality in every quarter, added
to hypocrisy and pharisaism. He shows what a
poor thing is sacrifice unaccompanied with virtue.
“To what purpose,” said he, “is the
multitude of sacrifices? Bring no more vain oblations.
Incense is an abomination to me, saith the Lord.
Therefore wash you, make you clean, put away the evil
of your doings; cease to do evil, learn to do well;
seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless,
plead for the widow.” Isaiah does not preach
dogmas, still less metaphysical distinctions; he preaches
against sin and demands repentance, and predicts calamity.
There are two points in his preaching
which stand out with great vividness, the
certain judgments of God in view of sin, retribution
on all offenders; and secondly, the mercy and forgiveness
of God in case of repentance. Retribution, however,
is not in Isaiah usually presented as the penalty
of transgression according to natural law; not, as
in the Proverbs, as the inevitable sequence of sin, “Whatsoever
ye sow, that shall ye also reap,” but
as direct punishment from God. Jehovah’s
awful personality is everywhere recognized, a
being who rules the universe as “the living
God,” who loves and abhors, who punishes and
rewards, who gives power to the faint, who judges
among the nations, who takes away from Judah and Jerusalem
the stay and the staff of bread and water. “To
whom then will ye liken God? Have ye not known,
have ye not heard, hath it not been told you from
the beginning? It is He that sitteth upon the
circle of the earth, and the inhabitants thereof are
as grasshoppers; that stretcheth out the heavens as
a curtain, that bringeth the princes to nothing.
Hast thou not known, hast thou not heard, that the
everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends
of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary?
He giveth power to the faint and weary, so that they
who wait upon Him shall renew their strength, mount
up with wings as eagles, run and not be weary, walk
and not faint.” Can stronger or more comforting
language be made use of to assert the personality
and providence of God? And where in the whole
circuit of Hebrew poetry is there more sublimity of
language, greater eloquence, or more profound conviction
of the evil and punishment of sin? Isaiah, the
greatest of all the prophets in his spiritual discernment,
in his profound insight of the future, is not behind
the author of Job in majestic and sublime description.
Whatever may be the severity of language
with which Isaiah denounces sin, and awful the judgments
he pronounces in view of it, as coming directly from
God, yet he seldom closes one of his dreadful sentences
without holding out the hope of divine forgiveness
in case of repentance, and the peace and comfort which
will follow. In his view the mercy of the Lord
is more impressive than his judgments. Isaiah
is anything but a prophet of wrath; his soul overflows
with tender sentiments and loving exhortation.
“Ho, every one that thirsteth, come to the waters!
Come ye, buy and eat! Yea, come, buy wine and
milk without money and without price!... Let
the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man
his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord, and
he will have mercy upon him, and to our God, for he
will abundantly pardon...Behold, the Lord’s
hand is not shortened that it cannot save; neither
his ear heavy that it cannot hear...Though your sins
be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though
they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.”
According to modern standards, we
are struck with the absence of what we call art, in
the writings of Isaiah. History, woes, promises,
hopes, aspirations, and exultations are all mingled
together in scarcely logical sequence. He exhorts,
he threatens, he reproaches, he promises, often in
the same chapter. The transition between preacher
and prophet is very sudden. But it is as prophet
that Isaiah is most frequently spoken of; and he is
the prophet of hope and consolation, although he denounces
woes upon the nations of the earth. In his prophetic
office he predicts the future of all the people known
to the Hebrews. He does not preach to them:
they do not hear his voice; they do not know what
tribulations shall be sent upon them. He commits
his prophecies to writing for the benefit of future
ages, in which he gives reasons for the judgments
to be sent upon wicked nations, so that the great
principles seen in the moral government of God may
remain of perpetual significance. These principles
centre around the great truth that national wickedness
will certainly be followed by national calamities,
which is also one of the most impressive truths that
all history teaches; and so uniform is the operation
of this great law that it is safe to make deductions
from it for the guidance of statesmen and the teachings
of moralists. National effeminacy which follows
luxury, great injustices which cry to heaven for vengeance,
and practical atheism and idolatry are certain to
call forth divine judgments, sometimes in
the form of destructive wars, sometimes in pestilence
and famine, and at other times in the gradual wasting
away of national resources and political power.
In conformity with this settled law in the moral government
of God, we read the fate of Nineveh, of Babylon, of
Tyre, of Jerusalem, of Carthage, of Antioch, of Corinth,
of Athens, of Rome; and I would even add of Venice,
of Turkey, of Spain. Nor is there anything which
can save modern cities and countries, however magnificent
their civilization, from a like visitation of Almighty
power, if they continue in the iniquity which all
the world perceives, and sometimes deplores.
It must have seemed as absurd to the readers of Isaiah’s
predictions twenty-five hundred years ago that Babylon
and Tyre should fall, as it would to the people of
our day should one predict the future ruin of Paris
or London or New York, if the vices which now flourish
in these cities should reach an overwhelming preponderance,
but which we hope may be wholly overcome by the influence
of Christianity and the spirit and interference of
God himself; for He governs the world by the same
principles that He did two thousand years ago, a
fact which seldom is ignored by any profound and religious
inquirer.
I have no faith in the permanence
of any form of civilization, or of any government,
where a certain depth of infamy and depravity is reached;
because the impressive lesson of history is that righteousness
exalteth a nation, and iniquity brings it low.
Isaiah predicted woes which came to pass, since the
cities and peoples against whom he denounced them
remained obstinately perverse in their iniquity and
atheism. Their doom was certain, without that
repentance which would lead to a radical change of
life and opinions. He held out no hope unless
they turned to the Lord; nor did any of the prophets.
Jeremiah was sad because he knew they would not repent,
even as Christ himself wept over Jerusalem. No
malédictions came from the pen or voice of
Isaiah such as David breathed against his enemies,
only the expression of the sad and solemn conviction
that unless the people and the nation repented, they
would all equally and surely perish, in accordance
with the stern laws written on the two tables of Moses, for
“I, thy God, am a jealous God, visiting the
iniquities of the fathers upon the children, even to
the third and fourth generation;” yea,
written before Moses, and to be read unto this day
in the very constitution of man, physical, mental,
spiritual, and social.
The prophet first announces the calamities
which both Judah and Ephraim the southern
and the northern kingdoms shall suffer from
Assyrian invasions. “The Lord shall shave
Judah with a razor, not only the head, but the beard,” thus
declaring that the land would be not only depopulated,
but become a desert, and that men should no longer
live by agriculture, or by trade and commerce, but
by grazing alone. “Woe to the crown of
pride, to the drunkards of Ephraim, whose glorious
beauty is a fading flower; it shall be trodden under
foot.” The sins of pride and drunkenness
are especially enumerated as the cause of their chastisement.
“Woe to Ariel [that is Jerusalem]! I will
camp against thee round about, and lay siege against
thee with a mount, and I will raise forts against
thee, and thou shalt be brought down.... Forasmuch
as this people draw near me with their mouth, and with
lips do they honor me, but have removed their heart
far from me,” hereby showing that
hypocrisy at Jerusalem was as prevalent as drunkenness
in Samaria, and as difficult to be removed.
Isaiah also reproves Judah for relying
on the aid of Egypt in the threatened Assyrian invasion,
instead of putting confidence in God, but declares
that the evil day will be deferred in case that Judah
repents; however, he holds out no hope that her people
may escape the final captivity to Babylon. All
that the prophet predicted in reference to the desolation
of Palestine by Syrians, Assyrians, and Babylonians,
as instruments of punishment, came to pass.
From the calamities which both Judah
and Israel should suffer for their pride, hypocrisy,
drunkenness, and idolatry, Isaiah turns to predict
the fall of other nations. “Wherefore it
shall come to pass that when the Lord hath performed
his whole work upon Jerusalem, I will punish the fruit
of the stout heart of the king of Assyria, and the
glory of his high looks.... For he saith, By
the strength of my hand I have done it, and by my
wisdom; for I am prudent, and I have removed the bounds
of the people, and have robbed their treasures, and
put down the inhabitants like a valiant man:
and as I have gathered all the earth, as one gathereth
eggs, therefore shall the Lord of Hosts send among
his fat ones leanness, and under his glory He shall
kindle a burning like the burning of a fire.”
In the inscriptions which have recently been deciphered
on the broken and decayed monuments of Nineveh nothing
is more remarkable than the boastful spirit, pride,
and arrogance of the Assyrian kings and conquerors.
The fall of still prouder Babylon
is next predicted. “Since thou hast said
in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt
my throne above the stars of God, thou shalt be brought
down to hell.... Babylon, the glory of kingdoms,
the beauty of the Chaldean excellency, shall be as
when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. It shall
never be inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt in from
generation to generation; neither shall the Arabians
pitch tent there, neither shall the shepherds make
their fold there; but wild beasts of the deserts shall
lie there, and the owls shall dwell there, and satyrs
shall dance there.” Both Nineveh and Babylon
arose to glory and power by unscrupulous conquests,
for their kings and people were military in their
tastes and habits; and with dominion cruelly and wickedly
obtained came arrogance and pride unbounded, and with
these luxury and sensuality. The wickedest city
of antiquity meets with the most terrible punishment
that is recorded of any city in the world’s
history. Not only were pride and cruelty the
peculiar vices of its kings and princes, but a gross
and degrading idolatry, allied with all the vices
that we call infamous, marked the inhabitants of the
doomed capital; so that the Hebrew language was exhausted
to find a word sufficiently expressive to mark its
foul depravity, or sufficiently exultant to rejoice
over its predicted \fall. Most cities have recovered
more or less from their calamities, Jerusalem,
Athens, Rome, but Babylon was utterly destroyed,
as by fire from heaven, and never has been rebuilt
or again inhabited, except by wild beasts. Its
very ruins, the remains of walls three hundred and
fifty feet in height, and of hanging gardens, and of
palaces a mile in circuit, and of majestic temples,
are now with difficulty determined. Truly has
that wicked city been swept with the besom of destruction,
as Isaiah predicted.
The prophet then predicts the desolation
of Moab on account of its pride, which seems to have
been its peculiar offence. It is to be noted
that the sin of pride has ever called forth a severe
judgment. “It goeth before destruction.”
Pride was one of the peculiarities of both Nineveh
and Babylon. But that which is exalted shall be
brought low. A bitter humiliation, at least,
has ever been visited upon those who have arrogated
a lofty superiority. It presupposes an independence
utterly inconsistent with the real condition of men
in the eyes of the Omnipotent; in the eyes of men,
even, it is offensive in the extreme, and ends in
isolation. We can tolerate certain great defects
and weaknesses, but no one ever got reconciled to
pride. It led to the ruin of Napoleon, as well
as of Cæsar; it creates innumerable enemies, even
in the most retired village; it separates and alienates
families; and when the punishment for it comes, everybody
rejoices. People say contemptuously, “Is
this the man that made the earth to tremble?”
There is seldom pity for a fallen greatness that rejoiced
in its strength, and despised the weakness of the
unfortunate. If anything is foreign to the spirit
of Christianity it is boastful pride, and yet it is
one of those things which it is difficult for conscience
to reach, as it is generally baptized with the name
of self-respect.
The next woe which Isaiah denounced
was on Egypt, which had played so great a part in
the history of ancient nations. The judgments
sent on this civilized country were severe, but were
not so appalling as those to be visited upon Babylon.
With Egypt was included Ethiopia. Civil war should
desolate both nations, and it should rage so fiercely
that “every one should fight against his brother,
and every one against his neighbor, city against city,
and kingdom against kingdom.” Moreover,
the famed wisdom of Egypt should fail; the people
in their distress should seek to gain direction from
wizards and charmers and soothsayers. It always
was a country of magicians, from the time that Aaron’s
rod swallowed up the rods of those boastful enchanters
who sought to repeat his miracles; it was a country
of soothsayers and sorcerers when finally conquered
by the Romans; it was the fruitful land of religious
superstitions in every age. It was governed in
the earliest times by pagan priests; the early kings
were priests, even Moses and Joseph were
initiated into the occult arts of the priests.
It was not wholly given to idolatry, since it is supposed
that there was an esoteric wisdom among the higher
priests which held to the One Supreme God and the
immortality of the soul, as well as to future rewards
and punishments. Nevertheless, the disgusting
ceremonies connected with the worship of animals were
far below the level of true religion, and the sorceries
and magical incantations and superstitious rites which
kept the people in ignorance, bondage, and degradation
called loudly for rebuke. By reason of these
things the nation was to be still farther subjected
to the grinding rule of tyrants. It was a fertile
and fruitful land, in which all the arts known to
antiquity flourished; but the rains of Ethiopia were
to be withheld, and such should be the unusual and
abnormal drouth that the Nile should be dried up,
and the reeds upon its banks should wither and decay.
The river was stocked with fish, but the fishermen
should cast their hooks and arrange their nets in vain.
Even the workers in flax (one great source of Egyptian
wealth and luxury) should be confounded. The
princes were to become fools; there was to be general
confusion, and no work was to be done in manufactures.
Even Judah should become a terror to Egypt, and fear
should overspread the land. To these calamities
there was to be some palliation. Five cities should
speak the language of Canaan, and swear by the Lord
of Hosts; and an altar should be erected in the middle
of the land which should be a witness unto the Lord
of Hosts, to whom the people should cry amid their
oppressions and miseries; and Jehovah should
be known in Egypt. “He shall smite it, but
he also shall heal it.” And when we remember
what a refuge the Jews found in Alexandria and other
cities in the no very distant future, keeping alive
there the worship of the true God, and what a hold
Christianity itself took in the second and third centuries
in that old country of priests and sorcerers, producing
a Clement, a Cyprian, a Tertullian, an Athanasius,
and an Augustine; yea, that when conquered by the
Mohammedans, the worship of the one true God was everywhere
maintained from that time to the present, we
feel that the mercy of God followed close upon his
justice. Isaiah predicted even the divine blessing
on the land, which it should share with Palestine:
“Blessed be Egypt my people, and Israel mine
inheritance.”
It is not to be supposed that Tyre
would escape from the calamities which were to be
sent on the various heathen nations. Tyre was
the great commercial centre of the world at that time,
as Babylon was the centre of imperial power.
Babylon ruled over the land, and Tyre over the sea;
the one was the capital of a vast empire, the other
was a maritime power, whose ships were to be seen
in every part of the Mediterranean. Tyre, by
its wealth and commerce, gained the supremacy in Phoenicia,
although Sidon was an older city, five miles distant.
But Tyre was defiled by the worship of Baal and Astarte;
it was a city of exceeding dissoluteness. It
was not only proud and luxurious, but abominably licentious;
it was a city of harlots. And what was to be its
fate? It was to be destroyed, and its merchandise
was to be scattered. “Howl, ye ships of
Tarshish! for your strength is laid waste, so that
there is no house, no entering in.... The Lord
of Hosts hath purposed it, to stain the pride of glory,
and bring to contempt all the honorable of the earth.”
The inhabitants of the city who sought escape from
death were compelled to take refuge in the colonies
at Cyprus, Carthage, and Tartessus in Spain.
The destruction of Tyre has been complete. There
are no remains of its former grandeur; its palaces
are indistinguishable ruins. Its traffic was
transferred to Carthage. Yet how strong must have
been a city which took Nebuchadnezzar thirteen years
to subdue! It arose from its ashes, but was reduced
again by Alexander.
Isaiah condenses his judgment in reference
to the other wicked nations of his time in a few rapid,
vigorous, and comprehensive clauses. “Behold,
Jehovah emptieth the earth, and layeth it waste, and
scattereth its inhabitants. And it happeneth,
as to the people, so to the priest; as to the servant,
so to the master; as to the maid, so to her mistress;
as to the buyer, so to the seller; as to the lender,
so to the borrower; as to the creditor, so to the
debtor. The earth has become wicked among its
inhabitants, therefore hath the curse devoured the
earth, and they who dwelt in it make expiation.”
We observe that these severe calamities are not uttered
in wrath. They are not malédictions; they
are simply divine revelations to the gifted prophet,
or logical deductions which the inspired statesman
declares from incontrovertible facts. In this
latter sense, all profound observations on the tendency
of passing events partake of the nature of prophecy.
A sage is necessarily a prophet. Men even prophesy
rain or heat or cold from natural phenomena, and their
predictions often come to pass. Much more to
be relied on is the prophetic wisdom which is seen
among great thinkers and writers, like Burke, Webster,
and Carlyle, since they rely on the operation of unchanging
laws, both moral and physical. When a nation
is wholly given over to lying and cheating in trade,
or to hypocritical observances in religion, or to
practical atheism, or to gross superstitions, or abominable
dissoluteness in morals, or to the rule of feeble
kings controlled by hypocritical priests and harlots,
is it presumptuous to predict the consequences?
Is it difficult to predict the ultimate effect on
a nation of overwhelming standing armies eating up
the resources of kings, or of the general prevalence
of luxury, effeminacy, and vice?
Isaiah having declared the judgment
of God on apostate, idolatrous, and wicked nations;
having emphasized the great principle of retribution,
even on nations that in his day were prosperous and
powerful; having rebuked the sins of the people among
whom he dwelt, and exposed hypocrisy and dead-letter
piety, lays down the fundamental law that
chastisements are sent to lead men to repentance, and
that where there is repentance there is forgiveness.
Severe as are his denunciations of sin, and certain
as is the punishment of it, yet his soul dwells on
the mercy and love of God more than even on His justice.
He never loses sight of reconciliation, although he
holds out but little hope for people wedded to their
idols. There is no hope for Babylon or Tyre; they
are doomed. Nor is there much encouragement for
Ephraim, which composed so large a part of the kingdom
of Israel; its people were to be dispersed, to become
captives, and never were to return to their native
hills. But he holds out great hope for Judah.
It will be conquered, and its people carried away
in slavery to Babylon, that is their chastisement
for apostasy; but a remnant of them shall return.
They had not utterly forgotten God, therefore a part
of the nation shall be rescued from captivity.
So full of hope is Isaiah that the nation shall not
utterly be destroyed, that he names his son Shear-jashub, “a
remnant shall return.” This is his watchword.
Certain is it that the Lord will have mercy on Jacob
whom he hath chosen; his promises will not fail.
Judah shall be chastised; but a part of Judah shall
return to Jerusalem, purified, wiser, and shall again
in due time flourish as a nation.
Isaiah is the prophet of hope, of
forgiveness, and of love. Not only on Judah shall
a blessing be bestowed, but upon the whole world.
Forgiveness is unbounded if there is repentance, no
matter what the sin may be. He almost anticipates
the message of Jesus by saying, “Though your
sins be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow.”
God’s mercy is past finding out. “Ho,
every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters!”
So full is he of the boundless love of God, extended
to all created things, that he calls on the hills
and the mountains to rejoice. Here he soars beyond
the Jew; he takes in the whole world in his rapturous
expectation of deliverance. He comforts all good
people under chastisement. He is as cheerful
as Jeremiah is sad.
Having laid down the conditions of
forgiveness, and expatiated on the divine benevolence,
Isaiah now sings another song, and ascends to loftier
heights. He is jubilant over the promised glories
of God’s people; he speaks of the redemption
of both Jew and Gentile. His prophetic mission
is now more distinctly unfolded. He blends the
forgiveness of sins with the promised Deliverer; he
unfolds the advent of the Messiah. He even foretells
in what form He shall come; he predicts the main facts
of His personal history. Not only shall there
“come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and
a branch out of its roots,” but he shall be
“a man despised and rejected, a man of sorrows
and acquainted with grief; who shall be wounded for
our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities,
brought as a lamb to the slaughter, cut off from the
living, making his grave with the wicked and with the
rich in his death; yet bruised because it pleased
the Lord, and because he made his soul an offering
for sin, and made intercession with the transgressors.”
Who is this stricken, persecuted, martyred personage,
bearing the iniquity of the race, and thus providing
a way for future salvation? Isaiah, with transcendent
majesty of style, clear and luminous as it is poetical,
declares that this person who is still unborn, this
light which shall appear in Galilee, is no less than
he on whose shoulders shall be the government, “whose
name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, the mighty
God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace;
of the increase of whose kingdom and peace there shall
be no end, upon the throne of David and upon his kingdom,
to order it, and to establish it with judgment and
justice forever.”
Only in some of the Messianic Psalms
do we meet with kindred passages, indicating the reign
of the Christ upon the earth, expressed with such
emphatic clearness. How marvellous and wonderful
this prophecy! Seven hundred years before its
fulfilment, it is expressed with such minuteness,
that, had the prophet lived in the Apostolic age, he
could not have described the Messiah more accurately.
The devout Jew, especially after the Captivity, believed
in a future deliverer, who should arise from the seed
of David, establish a great empire, and reign as a
temporal monarch; but he had no lofty and spiritual
views of this predicted reign. To Isaiah, more
even than to Abraham or David or any other person
in Jewish history, was it revealed that the reign of
the Christ was to be spiritual; that he was not to
be a temporal deliverer, but a Saviour redeeming mankind
from the curse of sin. Hence Isaiah is quoted
more than all the other prophets combined, especially
by the writers of the New Testament.
Having announced this glorious prediction
of the advent into our world of a divine Redeemer
in the form of a man, by whose life and suffering
and death the world should be saved, the prophet-poet
breaks out in rhapsodies. He cannot contain
his exultation. He loses sight of the judgments
he had declared, in his unbounded rejoicings that there
was to be a deliverance; that not only a remnant would
return to Jerusalem and become a renewed power, but
that the Messiah should ultimately reign over all
the nations of the earth, should establish a reign
of peace, so that warriors “should beat their
swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks.”
Heretofore the history of kings had been a history
of wars, of oppression, of injustice, of
cruelty. Miseries overspread the earth from this
scourge more than from all other causes combined.
The world was decimated by war, producing not only
wholesale slaughter, but captivity and slavery, the
utter extinction of nations. Isaiah had himself
dwelt upon the woes to be visited on mankind by war
more than any other prophet who had preceded him.
All the leading nations and capitals were to be utterly
destroyed or severely punished; calamity and misery
should be nearly universal; only “a remnant should
be saved.” Now, however, he takes the most
cheerful and joyous views. So marked is the contrast
between the first and latter parts of the Book of
Isaiah, that many great critics suppose that they were
written by different persons and at different times.
But whether there were two persons or one, the most
comforting and cheering doctrines to be found in the
Scriptures, before the Sermon on the Mount was preached,
are declared by Isaiah. The breadth and catholicity
of them are amazing from the pen of a Jew. The
whole world was to share with him in the promises
of a Saviour; the whole world was to be finally redeemed.
As recipients of divine privileges there was to be
no difference between Jew and Gentile. Paul himself
shows no greater mental illumination. “The
glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh
shall see it.”
In view of this glorious reign of
peace and universal redemption, Isaiah calls upon
the earth to be joyful and all the mountains to break
forth in singing, and Zion to awake, and Jerusalem
to put on her beautiful garments, and all waste places
to break forth in joy; for the glory of the Lord is
risen upon the City of David. How rapturously
does the prophet, in the most glowing and lofty flights
of poetry, dwell upon the time when the redeemed of
the Lord shall return to Zion with songs and thanksgivings,
no more to be called “forsaken,” but a
city to be renewed in beauties and glories, and in
which kings shall be nursing fathers to its sons and
daughters, and queens nursing mothers. These are
the tidings which the prophet brings, and which the
poet sings in matchless lyrics. To the Zion of
the Holy One of Israel shall the Gentiles come with
their precious offerings. “Violence shall
no more be heard in thy land,” saith the poet,
“wasting nor destruction within thy borders;
but thou shalt call thy walls Salvation and thy gates
Praise.... Thy sun shall no more go down, neither
shall thy moon withdraw itself, for the Lord shall
be thine everlasting light, and the day of thy mourning
shall be ended.... Thy people shall be all righteous;
they shall inherit the land forever, the branch of
my planting, the work of my hands, that I may be glorified.
A little one shall become a thousand, and a small one
a strong nation: I the Lord will hasten it in
its time.”
Salvation, peace, the glory of Zion! these
are the words which Isaiah reiterates. With these
are identified the spiritual kingdom of Christ, which
is to spread over the whole earth. The prophet
does not specify when that time shall come, when peace
shall be universal, and when all the people shall
be righteous; that part of the prophecy remains unfulfilled,
as well as the renewed glories of Jerusalem. Yet
a thousand years with the Lord are as one day.
No believing Christian doubts that it will be fulfilled,
as certainly as that Babylon should be destroyed,
or that a Messiah should appear among the Jews.
The day of deliverance began to dawn when Christianity
was proclaimed among the Gentiles. From that
time a great progress has been seen among the nations.
First, wars began to cease in the Roman world.
They were renewed when the empire of the Caesars fell,
but their ferocity and cruelty diminished; conquered
people were not carried away as slaves, nor were women
and children put to death, except in extraordinary
cases, which called out universal grief, compassion,
and indignation. With all the progress of truth
and civilization, it is amazing that Christian nations
should still be armed to the teeth, and that wars
are still so frequent. We fear that they will
not cease until those who govern shall be conscientious
Christians. But that the time will come when rulers
shall be righteous and nations learn war no more,
is a truth which Christians everywhere accept.
When, how, by the gradual spread of knowledge,
or by supernatural intervention, who can
tell? “Zion shall arise and shine....
The Gentiles shall come to its light, and kings to
the brightness of its rising.... Violence shall
no more be heard in the land, nor wasting and destruction
within its borders.... They shall not hurt or
destroy in all my holy mountain, saith the Lord....
And it shall come to pass that from one new moon to
another, and from one Sabbath to another, shall all
flesh come to worship before me, saith the Lord.”
This is the sublime faith of Christendom
set forth by the most sublime of the prophets, from
the most gifted and eloquent of the poets. On
this faith rests the consolation of the righteous
in view of the prevalence of iniquity. This prophecy
is full of encouragement and joy amid afflictions
and sorrows. It proclaims liberty to captives,
and the opening of the prison to those that are bound;
it preaches glad tidings to the meek, and binds up
the broken-hearted; it gives beauty for ashes, the
oil of joy for mourning, and the garment of praise
for the spirit of heaviness. This prediction
has inspired the religious poets of all nations; on
this is based the beauty and glory of the lyrical stanzas
we sing in our churches. The hymns and melodies
of the Church, the most immortal of human writings,
are inspired with this cheering anticipation.
The psalmody of the Church is rapturous, like Isaiah,
over the triumphant and peaceful reign of Christ,
coming sooner perhaps than we dream when we see the
triumphal career of wicked men. In the temporal
fall of a monstrous despotism, in the decline of wicked
cities and empires, in the light which is penetrating
all lands, in the shaking of Mohammedan thrones, in
the opening of the most distant East, in the arbitration
of national difficulties, in the terrible inventions
which make nations fear to go to war, in the wonderful
network of philanthropic enterprises, in the renewed
interest in sacred literature, in the recognition
of law and order as the first condition of civilized
society, in that general love of truth which science
has stimulated and rarely mocked, and which casts
its searching eye into all creeds and all hypocrisies
and all false philosophy, we share the exultant
spirit of the prophet, and in the language of one
of our great poets we repeat the promised joy:
“Rise, crowned
with light, imperial Salem, rise!
Exalt thy towering
head and lift thine eyes!
See a long race thy
spacious courts adorn,
See future sons and
daughters yet unborn!
See barbarous nations
at thy gates attend,
Walk in thy light, and
in thy temple bend!
See thy bright altars
thronged with prostrate kings,
And heaped with products
of Sabaean springs!
No more the rising sun
shall gild the morn,
Nor evening Cynthia
fill her silver horn;
But lost, dissolved
in thy superior rays,
One tide of glory, one
unclouded blaze
O’erflow thy courts;
the Light himself shall shine
Revealed, and God’s
eternal day be thine!
The seas shall waste,
the skies to smoke decay,
Rocks fall to dust,
and mountains melt away;
But fixed His word,
His saving power remains:
Thy realm forever lasts;
thy own Messiah reigns!”