Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the LORD revealed?
Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the LORD revealed?
1. report—literally, "the
thing heard," referring to which sense Paul says, "So,
then, faith cometh by hearing" (Romans 10:16;
Romans 10:17).
arm—power (Romans 10:17); exercised in miracles and in saving men (Romans 1:16;
1 Corinthians 1:18). The prophet, as if
present during Messiah's ministry on earth, is deeply moved to see
how few believed on Him (Isaiah 49:4;
Mark 6:6; Mark 9:19;
Acts 1:15). Two reasons are
given why all ought to have believed: (1) The "report"
of the "ancient prophets." (2) "The arm of Jehovah"
exhibited in Messiah while on earth. In HORSLEY'S
view, this will be the penitent confession of the Jews, "How few
of our nation, in Messiah's days, believed in Him!"
For he shall grow up before him as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry ground: he hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him.
2. tender plant—Messiah grew
silently and insensibly, as a sucker from an ancient stock, seemingly
dead (namely, the house of David, then in a decayed state) (see on
Isaiah 53:1).
shall grow . . . hath—rather,
"grew up . . . had."
before him—before
Jehovah. Though unknown to the world (Isaiah 53:1), Messiah was observed by God, who ordered the most
minute circumstances attending His growth.
root—that is, sprout
from a root.
form—beautiful form:
sorrow had marred His once beautiful form.
and when we shall see—rather,
joined with the previous words, "Nor comeliness (attractiveness)
that we should look (with delight) on Him."
there is—rather, "was."
The studied reticence of the New Testament as to His form, stature,
color, c., was designed to prevent our dwelling on the bodily, rather
than on His moral beauty, holiness, love, &c., also a
providential protest against the making and veneration of images of
Him. The letter of P. LENTULUS
to the emperor Tiberius, describing His person, is spurious so also
the story of His sending His portrait to Abgar, king of Edessa; and
the alleged impression of His countenance on the handkerchief of
Veronica. The former part of this verse refers to His birth and
childhood; the latter to His first public appearance [VITRINGA].
He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not.
3. rejected—"forsaken
of men" [GESENIUS].
"Most abject of men." Literally, "He who ceases
from men," that is, is no longer regarded as a man
[HENGSTENBERG]. (See on
Isaiah 53:5; Isaiah 53:5).
man of sorrows—that is,
whose distinguishing characteristic was sorrows.
acquainted with—familiar
by constant contact with.
grief—literally,
"disease"; figuratively for all kinds of calamity
(Jeremiah 6:14); leprosy
especially represented this, being a direct judgment from God. It is
remarkable Jesus is not mentioned as having ever suffered under
sickness.
and we hid . . .
faces—rather, as one who causes men to hide
their faces from Him (in aversion) [MAURER].
Or, "He was as an hiding of the face before it," that is,
as a thing before which a man covers his face in disgust
[HENGSTENBERG]. Or, "as
one before whom is the covering of the face"; before whom one
covers the face in disgust [GESENIUS].
we—the prophet
identifying himself with the Jews. See HORSLEY'S
view (see on Isaiah 53:5).
esteemed . . . not—negative
contempt; the previous words express positive.
Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted.
4. Surely . . . our
griefs—literally, "But yet He hath taken (or
borne) our sicknesses," that is, they who despised
Him because of His human infirmities ought rather to have esteemed
Him on account of them; for thereby "Himself took OUR
infirmities" (bodily diseases). So quotes it. In the Hebrew for "borne," or
took, there is probably the double notion, He took on
Himself vicariously (so Isaiah 53:5;
Isaiah 53:6; Isaiah 53:8;
Isaiah 53:12), and so He took
away; His perfect humanity whereby He was bodily afflicted for
us, and in all our afflictions (Isaiah 63:9;
Hebrews 4:15) was the ground on which
He cured the sick; so that Matthew's quotation is not a mere
accommodation. See Note 42 of ARCHBISHOP
MAGEE, Atonement.
The Hebrew there may mean to overwhelm with darkness;
Messiah's time of darkness was temporary (Hebrews 4:15), answering to the bruising of His heel; Satan's is
to be eternal, answering to the bruising of his head (compare
Isaiah 50:10).
carried . . . sorrows—The
notion of substitution strictly. "Carried," namely,
as a burden. "Sorrows," that is, pains of the mind;
as "griefs" refer to pains of the body (Psalms 32:10;
Psalms 38:17). Psalms 38:17 might seem to oppose this: "And bare our sicknesses."
But he uses "sicknesses" figuratively for sins, the
cause of them. Christ took on Himself all man's "infirmities;"
so as to remove them; the bodily by direct miracle, grounded on His
participation in human infirmities; those of the soul by His
vicarious suffering, which did away with the source of both.
Sin and sickness are ethically connected as cause and effect (Isaiah 33:24;
Psalms 103:3; Matthew 9:2;
John 5:14; James 5:15).
we did esteem him
stricken—judicially [LOWTH],
namely, for His sins; whereas it was for ours. "We
thought Him to be a leper" [JEROME,
Vulgate], leprosy being the direct divine judgment for guilt
(Leviticus 13:1-59; Numbers 12:10;
Numbers 12:15; 2 Chronicles 26:18-21).
smitten—by divine
judgments.
afflicted—for His sins;
this was the pointin which they so erred (Luke 23:34;
Acts 3:17; 1 Corinthians 2:8).
He was, it is true, "afflicted," but not for His
sins.
But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.
5. wounded—a bodily wound; not
mere mental sorrow; literally, "pierced"; minutely
appropriate to Messiah, whose hands, feet, and side were pierced (). The Margin, wrongly, from a Hebrew root,
translates, "tormented."
for . . . for— (Romans 4:25;
2 Corinthians 5:21; Hebrews 9:28;
1 Peter 2:24; 1 Peter 3:18)
—the cause for which He suffered not His own, but our
sins.
bruised—crushing inward
and outward suffering (see on 1 Peter 3:18).
chastisement—literally,
the correction inflicted by a parent on children for their
good (Hebrews 12:5-8; Hebrews 12:10;
Hebrews 12:11). Not punishment
strictly; for this can have place only where there is guilt, which He
had not; but He took on Himself the chastisement whereby the peace
(reconciliation with our Father; Romans 5:1;
Ephesians 2:14; Ephesians 2:15;
Ephesians 2:17) of the children of
God was to be effected (Ephesians 2:17).
upon him—as a burden;
parallel to "hath borne" and "carried."
stripes—minutely
prophetical of His being scourged (Matthew 27:26;
1 Peter 2:24).
healed—spiritually
(Psalms 41:4; Jeremiah 8:22).
All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us all.
6. Penitent confession of
believers and of Israel in the last days ().
sheep . . . astray—
(Psalms 119:176; 1 Peter 2:25).
The antithesis is, "In ourselves we were scattered; in Christ we
are collected together; by nature we wander, driven headlong to
destruction; in Christ we find the way to the gate of life"
[CALVIN]. True, also,
literally of Israel before its coming restoration (Ezekiel 34:5;
Ezekiel 34:6; Zechariah 10:2;
Zechariah 10:6; compare with Ezekiel 34:23;
Ezekiel 34:24; Jeremiah 23:4;
Jeremiah 23:5; also Jeremiah 23:5).
laid—"hath made
to light on Him" [LOWTH].
Rather, "hath made to rush upon Him" [MAURER].
the iniquity—that is,
its penalty; or rather, as in Jeremiah 23:5; He was not merely a sin offering (which would
destroy the antithesis to "righteousness"), but "sin
for us"; sin itself vicariously; the representative of the
aggregate sin of all mankind; not sins in the plural,
for the "sin" of the world is one (Romans 5:16;
Romans 5:17); thus we are made not
merely righteous, but righteousness, even "the
righteousness of God." The innocent was punished as if
guilty, that the guilty might be rewarded as if innocent. This
verse could be said of no mere martyr.
He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth.
7. oppressed—LOWTH
translates, "It was exacted, and He was made answerable."
The verb means, "to have payment of a debt sternly exacted"
(Deuteronomy 15:2; Deuteronomy 15:3),
and so to be oppressed in general; the exaction of the
full penalty for our sins in His sufferings is probably alluded to.
and . . . afflicted—or,
and yet He suffered, or bore Himself patiently, c.
[HENGSTENBERG and MAURER].
LOWTH'S translation, "He
was made answerable," is hardly admitted by the Hebrew.
opened not . . . mouth—
Jeremiah 11:19 and David in Psalms 38:13;
Psalms 38:14; Psalms 39:9,
prefiguring Messiah (Matthew 26:63;
Matthew 27:12; Matthew 27:14;
1 Peter 2:23).
He was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall declare his generation? for he was cut off out of the land of the living: for the transgression of my people was he stricken.
8. Rather, "He was taken
away (that is, cut off) by oppression and by a judicial sentence";
a hendiadys for, "by an oppressive judicial sentence"
[LOWTH and HENGSTENBERG].
GESENIUS not so well, "He
was delivered from oppression and punishment" only by death.
English Version also translates, "from . . . from,"
not "by . . . by." But "prison" is not true of
Jesus, who was not incarcerated; restraint and bonds
(John 18:24) more accord with
the Hebrew. Acts 8:33;
translate as the Septuagint: "In His humiliation His
judgment (legal trial) was taken away"; the virtual sense of the
Hebrew as rendered by LOWTH
and sanctioned by the inspired writer of Acts; He was treated as one
so mean that a fair trial was denied Him (Matthew 26:59;
Mark 14:55-59). HORSLEY
translates, "After condemnation and judgment He was accepted."
who . . . declare . . .
generation—who can set forth (the wickedness of) His
generation? that is, of His contemporaries [ALFORD
on Acts 8:33], which suits best
the parallelism, "the wickedness of His generation"
corresponding to "oppressive judgment." But LUTHER,
"His length of life," that is, there shall be no end of
His future days (Isaiah 53:10;
Romans 6:9). CALVIN
includes the days of His Church, which is inseparable from
Himself. HENGSTENBERG,
"His posterity." He, indeed, shall be cut off, but His race
shall be so numerous that none can fully declare it. CHYRSOSTOM,
c., "His eternal sonship and miraculous incarnation."
cut off—implying a
violent death (Daniel 9:26).
my people—Isaiah,
including himself among them by the word "my"
[HENGSTENBERG]. Rather,
JEHOVAH speaks in the
person of His prophet, "My people," by the election
of grace (Hebrews 2:13).
was he stricken—Hebrew,
"the stroke (was laid) upon Him." GESENIUS
says the Hebrew means "them" the collective body,
whether of the prophets or people, to which the Jews refer the whole
prophecy. But JEROME, the
Syriac, and Ethiopiac versions translate it "Him";
so it is singular in some passages; Hebrews 2:13, His; Job 27:23,
Him; Isaiah 44:15,
thereto. The Septuagint, the Hebrew, lamo, "upon
Him," read the similar words, lamuth, "unto death,"
which would at once set aside the Jewish interpretation, "upon
them." ORIGEN,
who laboriously compared the Hebrew with the Septuagint,
so read it, and urged it against the Jews of his day, who would have
denied it to be the true reading if the word had not then really so
stood in the Hebrew text [LOWTH].
If his sole authority be thought insufficient, perhaps lamo
may imply that Messiah was the representative of the collective
body of all men; hence the equivocal plural-singular form.
And he made his grave with the wicked, and with the rich in his death; because he had done no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth.
9. Rather, "His grave was
appointed," or "they appointed Him His grave"
[HENGSTENBERG]; that is,
they intended (by crucifying Him with two thieves, ) that He should have His grave "with the wicked."
Compare John 19:31, the denial
of honorable burial being accounted a great ignominy (see on John 19:31; Jeremiah 26:23).
and with . . . rich—rather,
"but He was with a rich man," c. GESENIUS,
for the parallelism to "the wicked," translates "ungodly"
(the effect of riches being to make one ungodly) but the
Hebrew everywhere means "rich," never by itself
ungodly; the parallelism, too, is one of contrast; namely, between
their design and the fact, as it was ordered by God
(Matthew 27:57; Mark 15:43-46;
John 19:39; John 19:40);
two rich men honored Him at His death, Joseph of Arimathæa, and
Nicodemus.
in his death—Hebrew,
"deaths." LOWTH
translates, "His tomb"; bamoth, from a different
root, meaning "high places," and so mounds for sepulture
(Ezekiel 43:7). But all the
versions oppose this, and the Hebrew hardly admits it. Rather
translate, "after His death" [HENGSTENBERG];
as we say, "at His death." The plural,
"deaths," intensifies the force; as Adam by sin "dying
died" (Genesis 2:17, Margin);
that is, incurred death, physical and spiritual. So Messiah, His
substitute, endured death in both senses; spiritual, during His
temporary abandonment by the Father; physical, when He gave up the
ghost.
because—rather, as the
sense demands (so in Job 16:17),
"although He had done no," c. [HENGSTENBERG],
(1 Peter 2:20-22 1 John 3:5).
violence—that is,
wrong.
Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise him; he hath put him to grief: when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin, he shall see his seed, he shall prolong his days, and the pleasure of the LORD shall prosper in his hand.
10. Transition from His
humiliation to His exaltation.
pleased the Lord—the
secret of His sufferings. They were voluntarily borne by Messiah, in
order that thereby He might "do Jehovah's will"
(John 6:38; Hebrews 10:7;
Hebrews 10:9), as to man's
redemption; so at the end of the verse, "the pleasure of the
LORD shall prosper in His
hand."
bruise—(see Hebrews 10:9); Genesis 3:15, was hereby
fulfilled, though the Hebrew word for "bruise,"
there, is not the one used here. The word "Himself," in
Matthew, implies a personal bearing on Himself of our
maladies, spiritual and physical, which included as a consequence
His ministration to our bodily ailments: these latter are the reverse
side of sin; His bearing on Him our spiritual malady involved with it
His bearing sympathetically, and healing, the outward: which is its
fruits and its type. HENGSTENBERG
rightly objects to MAGEE'S
translation, "taken away," instead of "borne,"
that the parallelism to "carried" would be destroyed.
Besides, the Hebrew word elsewhere, when connected with sin,
means to bear it and its punishment (Genesis 3:15). Matthew, elsewhere, also sets forth His vicarious
atonement (Matthew 20:28).
when thou, c.—rather,
as Margin, "when His soul (that is, He) shall have made
an offering," &c. In the English Version the change
of person is harsh: from Jehovah, addressed in the second person (Matthew 20:28), to Jehovah speaking in the first person in Matthew 20:28. The Margin rightly makes the prophet in the name of
Jehovah Himself to speak in this verse.
offering for sin—
(Romans 3:25 1 John 2:2;
1 John 4:10).
his seed—His spiritual
posterity shall be numerous (1 John 4:10); nay, more, though He must die, He shall see them.
A numerous posterity was accounted a high blessing among the Hebrews;
still more so, for one to live to see them (Genesis 48:11;
Psalms 128:6).
prolong . . . days—also
esteemed a special blessing among the Jews (Psalms 128:6). Messiah shall, after death, rise again to an endless life
(Hosea 6:2; Romans 6:9).
prosper— (Romans 6:9, Margin).
He shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied: by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many; for he shall bear their iniquities.
11. Jehovah is still speaking.
see of the travail—He
shall see such blessed fruits resulting from His sufferings as amply
to repay Him for them (Isaiah 49:4;
Isaiah 49:5; Isaiah 50:5;
Isaiah 50:9). The "satisfaction,"
in seeing the full fruit of His travail of soul in the conversion of
Israel and the world, is to be realized in the last days (Isaiah 50:9).
his knowledge—rather,
the knowledge (experimentally) of Him (John 17:3;
Philippians 3:10).
my . . . servant—Messiah
(Isaiah 42:1; Isaiah 52:13).
righteous—the ground on
which He justifies others, His own righteousness (Isaiah 52:13).
justify—treat as if
righteous; forensically; on the ground of His meritorious
suffering, not their righteousness.
bear . . . iniquities—
(Isaiah 53:4; Isaiah 53:5),
as the sinner's substitute.
Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with the strong; because he hath poured out his soul unto death: and he was numbered with the transgressors; and he bare the sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors.
12. divide—as a conqueror
dividing the spoil after a victory (Psalms 2:8;
Luke 11:22).
him—for Him.
with . . . great—HENGSTENBERG
translates, "I will give Him the mighty for a portion"; so
the Septuagint. But the parallel clause, "with the
strong," favors English Version. His triumphs shall be
not merely among the few and weak, but among the many and mighty.
spoil . . . strong—
(Colossians 2:15; compare Colossians 2:15). "With the great; with the mighty," may mean, as
a great and mighty hero.
poured out . . . soul—that
is, His life, which was considered as residing in the blood (Leviticus 17:11;
Romans 3:25).
numbered with, c.—not
that He was a transgressor, but He was treated as such,
when crucified with thieves (Mark 15:28
Luke 22:37).
made intercession,
c.—This office He began on the cross (Luke 22:37), and now continues in heaven (Isaiah 59:16
Hebrews 9:24; 1 John 2:1).
Understand because before "He was numbered . . . He bare
. . . made intercession." His meritorious death and intercession
are the cause of His ultimate triumph. MAURER,
for the parallelism, translates, "He was put on the same footing
with the transgressors." But English Version agrees
better with the Hebrew, and with the sense and fact as to
Christ. MAURER'S
translation would make a tautology after "He was numbered with
the transgressors"; parallelism does not need so servile a
repetition. "He made intercession for," &c.,
answers to the parallel, "He was numbered with,"
&c., as effect answers to cause, His intercession
for sinners being the effect flowing from His having been numbered
with them.