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Isaiah 34

Cambridge

Ch. 34–35 A Prophecy of Vengeance on Edom, and the future blessedness of IsraelThe oracle consists of two sharply contrasted eschatological pictures, one of judgment, the other of redemption. i. The first (ch. 34) commences with a lurid description of the terrors of the last judgment, which is a universal judgment on the nations of the world (Isaiah 34:1-4). But this passes abruptly (Isaiah 34:5-17) into a threat of special and fearful vengeance on Edom for its implacable hostility to the people of God (Isaiah 34:8). An indiscriminate slaughter of its population is decreed (5–8); and the land shall be turned into a perpetual desolation, haunted by desert beasts and creatures of demon kind (9–17). ii. Ch. 35 is a beautiful prophecy of Israel’s restoration, in imagery borrowed chiefly from the second part of the book of Isaiah. The marvellous transformation of nature, the appearing of Jehovah to deliver His people, the cessation of human infirmities, and the raising of a highway for the redeemed of the Lord to return, lead up to the final promise of everlasting joy and gladness to the ransomed nation, and the banishment of sorrow and sighing from their midst. The passage is post-Exilic. Although the “perpetual hatred” (Ezekiel 35:5) of Edom to Judah no doubt dated from the subjugation of the former country by David (2 Samuel 8:13-14), so passionate a longing for vengeance as we find here is only intelligible after the crowning exhibition of Edomitish hostility in the day of Jerusalem’s calamity (cf. Psalms 137:7; Ezekiel 25:12; Ezekiel 35:5; Ezekiel 35:10 ff.; Obadiah 1:10-16). This conclusion is confirmed by obvious traces of familiarity with writings belonging to the end of the Exile if not later (chs. 13, 14, 40 ff., esp. Isaiah 63:1-6), and by the fact that the dispersion of the Jews is presupposed by ch. 35. A more exact determination of its date is impossible.

The mutual antipathy of Judah and Edom continued unabated for centuries after the Exile, and was constantly inflamed by fresh encroachments on Judæan territory on the part of the Edomites, who in this period were being dispossessed of their ancestral possessions by the growing power of the Nabatæans. Some such incident may have been the occasion of the threat in Malachi 1:2-5 (c. 450 b.c.), and a succession of them would keep alive the embittered feeling which is unmistakeably present in this prophecy.

Isaiah 34:1-4

1–4. The announcement of the world-judgment, introduced by a proclamation addressed to all nations. The peoples are invited to come near, as if for debate (ch. Isaiah 41:1, Isaiah 48:16, Isaiah 57:3), but really to hear their doom. Cf. ch. Isaiah 1:2; Deuteronomy 32:1; Micah 1:2. all that is therein] Better, the fulness thereof (R.V.);—the same word as in ch. Isaiah 6:3. all things that come forth of it] The word is used (1) of vegetation, the produce of the earth, (2) of a man’s issue: here, apparently, by a mixture of metaphors, of mankind as springing from the earth.

Isaiah 34:2

  1. For the indignation of the Lord …] Rather, For Jehovah hath indignation … and fury. It is remarkable that no reason is assigned for Jehovah’s anger. their armies] their host (R.V.). he hath utterly destroyed them] Lit. he hath made them a devoted thing,—ḥ ?çrem, a technical word for that which is irrevocably devoted to the deity, usually implying utter destruction. Cf. ch. Isaiah 11:15.

Isaiah 34:3

  1. Cf. Joe 2:20; Amos 4:10.

Isaiah 34:4

  1. The representation seems somewhat confused. Bickell acutely observes that “the host of heaven” is probably a marginal gloss to “their host” later in the verse, and that the original subject of the first clause (“the hills”) has been displaced by it. The first line then supplies the parallel to the last line of Isa 34:3 :— “And the mountains shall melt with their blood (4.) And all [the hills] shall be dissolved.” and the heavens … as a scrole] Cf. ch. Isaiah 51:6; Psalms 102:26; Matthew 24:29; Revelation 6:13-14. fall dawn … falleth off from … fallen fig] R.V. fade away … fadeth from off … fading leaf.

Isaiah 34:5-8

5–8. The slaughter of the inhabitants of Edom.

Isaiah 34:6

  1. The sword of the Lord is filled] Render: A sword hath Jehovah which is filled, &c. made fat with fatness] Or, “greased with fat” (different words in the original). The Edomites are compared to sacrificial animals; cf. Zephaniah 1:7; Jeremiah 46:10; Jeremiah 51:40; Ezekiel 39:17 ff. (See also 2 Samuel 1:22.) Bozrah (ch. Isaiah 63:1; Genesis 36:33; Amos 1:12; Jeremiah 49:13; Jeremiah 49:22) was a chief city of Edom, certainly not a place of that name in the Hauran; more probably El-Buṣ ?eira, south of the Dead Sea; but Wetzstein identifies it with Petra.

Isaiah 34:7

  1. For unicorns render with R.V. wild oxen. come down] sc. to the place of slaughter, Jeremiah 48:15, &c.

Isaiah 34:8

  1. Comp. ch. Isaiah 61:2, Isaiah 63:4; Jeremiah 50:28; Jeremiah 51:6; Jeremiah 51:11. the controversy of Zion] with Edom.

Isaiah 34:9-17

9–17. The fate of the land of Edom is next represented under two incompatible images,—first that of a perpetual conflagration (Isaiah 34:9-10), and second that of a dreary solitude, peopled only by “doleful creatures” (Isaiah 34:11 ff.).

Isaiah 34:11

  1. the cormorant and the bittern] Zephaniah 2:14. R.V. has “the pelican (Leviticus 11:18; Psalms 102:6) and the porcupine”; for the latter see on ch. Isaiah 14:23. the line of confusion, and the stones (R.V. plummet) of emptiness] See on ch. Isaiah 28:17. These implements of the builder were naturally employed where a partial destruction (of houses, &c.) was contemplated; but the image is also extended to the case of complete demolition; 2 Kings 21:13; Lamentations 2:8. “Confusion” and “emptiness” stand for the words tôhû and bôhû, used of the primeval chaos in Genesis 1:2 (cf. Jeremiah 4:23).

Isaiah 34:12

  1. They shall call the nobles … there] A very obscure sentence, probably through a defect in the text. The rendering of E.V. might be maintained if with Prof. Weir we suppose a transposition of words in the original; the inference being that the monarchy in Edom was elective (cf. Genesis 36:31 ff.). More likely, however, “her nobles” is the subject of a sentence the rest of which is now lost; and the following words are to be translated “and there is no kingdom there which they may proclaim.”

Isaiah 34:13

  1. The mention of nobles and princes naturally leads to the palaces and castles. dragons … owls] jackals … ostriches (R.V.). See on ch. Isaiah 13:21 f.

Isaiah 34:14

  1. wild beasts the desert … wild beasts of the island … satyr] See on ch. Isaiah 13:21 f. the shrich owl] The Hebr. is Lîlîth, a fem. formation from Iáil “night.” Render with Cheyne: the night-hag. Lilith appears to be a creation of the Babylonian demonology. “This Lilith plays a great part in the Talmudic demonology; the cabalistic Rabbis forged a whole legend in which this spirit is said to have taken a feminine form to deceive Adam, and to have united herself to him.” (Lenormant, Chaldæan Magic, Engl. Tr. p. 38.) She is mentioned in the Bible only here. find for herself a place of rest] On the restlessness of evil spirits, cf. Matthew 12:43, “walketh through dry places, seeking rest.”

Isaiah 34:15

  1. the great owl] the arrowsnake as in R.V. gather under her shadow] The expression is almost meaningless, when applied to a very small snake. Duhm, by a clever emendation, reads “shall lay and hatch and heap up her eggs” (bκηehβ for bμηillβh).

Isaiah 34:16

  1. The verse is remarkable in several respects. It seems to be a solemn assurance that the foregoing prediction shall be fulfilled literally and down to the smallest details; and must therefore be addressed to a future generation of readers. This implies a view of the scope and functions of prophecy, which is not that of the older prophets. Further, the expression “book of Jehovah” appears to point to the existence of a prophetic canon; and the opening exhortation presupposes a habit of searching for evidences of the fulfilment of prophecy. All these circumstances would indicate a late date for the composition of this oracle. Some commentators, however, have sought to evade this interpretation by amending the text with the help of the LXX.; reading: “According to their number Jehovah calls them, &c.” But the received text excites no suspicion. the book of the Lord] The immediate reference must be to the present prophecy, since there is no other which speaks of the desert creatures that are to possess the land of Edom. But the phrase is too pregnant to be used of a detached oracle; we must therefore conclude that it was destined to be incorporated in a collection of sacred writings. my mouth … his spirit] The change of person is harsh. Read either “his mouth” or (better) “the mouth of Jehovah” (LXX. has “Jehovah” alone).

Isaiah 34:17

  1. The eternity of the judgment is again emphasised (Isaiah 34:10).

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