the Third Week after Easter
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Izhibhalo Ezingcwele
UIsaya 51:13
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from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
forgettest: Isaiah 17:10, Deuteronomy 32:18, Jeremiah 2:32
that hath: Isaiah 40:22, Isaiah 42:5, Isaiah 44:24, Isaiah 45:12, Job 9:8, Job 37:18, Psalms 102:25, Psalms 102:26, Psalms 104:2, Jeremiah 10:11, Jeremiah 10:12, Jeremiah 51:15, Hebrews 1:9-12
feared: Isaiah 8:12, Isaiah 8:13, Isaiah 57:11, Hebrews 11:15
were ready: or, made himself ready, Isaiah 10:29-32, Exodus 14:10-13, Exodus 15:9, Exodus 15:10, Esther 5:14, Daniel 3:15, Daniel 3:19, Revelation 20:9
where is: Isaiah 10:33, Isaiah 10:34, Isaiah 14:16, Isaiah 14:17, Isaiah 16:4, Isaiah 33:18, Isaiah 33:19, Isaiah 37:36-38, Exodus 14:13, Esther 7:10, Job 20:5-9, Psalms 9:6, Psalms 9:7, Psalms 37:35, Psalms 37:36, Psalms 76:10, Daniel 4:32, Daniel 4:33, Matthew 2:16-20, Acts 12:23, 1 Corinthians 1:20, 1 Corinthians 15:55, Revelation 19:20
Reciprocal: Genesis 1:1 - God Exodus 14:29 - walked Joshua 17:18 - for thou shalt 1 Samuel 15:24 - I feared 1 Samuel 17:11 - dismayed 1 Kings 19:3 - he arose 2 Kings 19:6 - Be not afraid Nehemiah 4:14 - remember Nehemiah 6:13 - that I should Job 8:13 - that forget God Job 35:10 - Where Psalms 50:22 - forget Psalms 56:11 - I will not Psalms 72:4 - the oppressor Isaiah 7:4 - fear not Isaiah 26:14 - dead Isaiah 29:20 - the terrible Isaiah 37:6 - Be not Isaiah 41:10 - Fear Isaiah 48:2 - The Lord Isaiah 49:17 - thy destroyers Isaiah 54:14 - thou shalt be Jeremiah 27:5 - made Jeremiah 38:19 - I Jeremiah 41:18 - for they Ezekiel 32:23 - which Daniel 3:18 - be it Zechariah 12:1 - which Matthew 10:26 - Fear Luke 21:9 - when John 19:13 - heard 1 Thessalonians 4:9 - for ye Hebrews 1:10 - hast 1 Peter 4:19 - a faithful
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And forgettest the Lord thy Maker,.... That he is thy Maker, and therefore is able to protect and preserve thee; when the fear of man prevails God is forgotten, his power, his providence, his promises, and past instances of divine favour and goodness; were these more frequently recollected, considered, and thought of, they would prove an antidote against the fear of men; and especially when it is observed, that he that is our Maker is he
that hath stretched forth the heavens, and laid the foundations of the earth; these are amazing works of his hands; and what is it that he cannot do that has made these? these he upholds and maintains in being, and does all things in them as he pleases, and overrules all for his own glory and his people's good, and therefore they have nothing to fear from men; and yet they are afraid of them, such is their distrust and unbelief:
and hast feared continually every day; not only at some certain times, when the enemy has appeared very formidable, and threatened with destruction, or some terrible rumour has been spread, but every day, every hour, and every moment; and to be always in a panic must be very uncomfortable living, as well as very dishonourable:
because of the fury of the oppressor; either the king of Babylon, or antichrist:
as if he were ready to destroy: had drawn his sword, and just going to give the fatal blow:
and where, or "but where", is the fury of the oppressor? where's the fury of Pharaoh, that great oppressor of God's Israel formerly? it is gone and vanished like smoke: where's the fury of Sennacherib king of Assyria, and his army, that threatened Jerusalem with ruin? it was over in a short time, in one night the whole host, or the greater part of it, were destroyed by an angel: and where is, or will be, the fury of the king of Babylon? it will not last always; nor the fury of the antichristian oppressor.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
And forgettest the Lord thy Maker - These verses are designed to rebuke that state of the mind - alas! too common, even among the people of God - where they are intimidated by the number and strength of their foes, and forget their dependence on God, and his promises of aid. In such circumstances God reproves them for their want of confidence in him, and calls on them to remember that he has made the heavens, and has all power to save them.
That hath stretched forth the heavens - (See the notes at Isaiah 40:12, Isaiah 40:26).
And hast feared continually every day - They had continually feared and trembled before their oppressors.
Because of the fury of the oppressor - Those who had oppressed them in Babylon.
As if he were ready to destroy - Margin, ‘Made himself ready,’ The idea is, that he was preparing to destroy the people - perhaps as a marksman is making ready his bow and arrows. The oppressor had been preparing to crush them in the dust, and they trembled, and did not remember that God was abundantly able to protect them.
And where is the fury of the oppressor? - What is there to dread? The idea is, that the enemies of the Jews would be cut off, and that they should therefore put their confidence in God, and rely on his promised aid.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Isaiah 51:13. Of the oppressor, as if he, c. — "The כ caph in כאשר keasher seems clearly to have changed its situation from the end of the preceding word to the beginning of this or rather, to have been omitted by mistake there, because it was here. That it was there the Septuagint show by rendering המציקך hammetsikech θλιβοντος, of him that oppressed thee. And so they render this word in both its places in this verse. The Vulgate also has the pronoun in the first instance; furoris ejus qui te tribulabat." Dr. Jubb. The correction seems well founded; I have not conformed the translation to it, because it makes little difference in the sense.