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Исаија 4:1 Коментар

11 historical voices

Како је Црква читала Isaiah 4:1 кроз два миленијума — Метјуа Хенрија, Јована Калвина, Августина Хипонског, Јована Златоустог и других, прикупљено стих по стих из јавног домена.

KJV (1611) · en
And in that day seven women shall take hold of one man, saying, We will eat our own bread, and wear our own apparel: only let us be called by thy name, to take away our reproach.
BLIVRE (2018) · pt-br
E sete mulheres tomarão um mesmo homem naquele dia, dizendo: Nós comeremos de nosso pão, e nos vestiremos de nossas roupas; queremos somente que teu nome seja posto sobre nós; livra-nos de nossa vergonha!
ARC (1995) · pt-br
Sete mulheres naquele dia lançarão mão dum só homem, dizendo: Nós comeremos do nosso pão, e nos vestiremos de nossos vestidos; tão somente queremos ser chamadas pelo teu nome; tira o nosso opróbrio.

Гласови кроз векове

Puritanci 4

Matthew Henry · 1662 Complete Commentary on the Whole Bible
Introduction
In this chapter we have, I. A threatening of the paucity and scarceness of man (Isa 4:1), which might fitly enough have been added to the close of the foregoing chapter, to which it has a plain reference. II. A promise of the restoration of Jerusalem's peace and purity, righteousness and safety, in the days of the Messiah (Isa 4:2-6). Thus, in wrath, mercy is remembered, and gospel grace is a sovereign relief, in reference to the terrors of the law and the desolations made by sin.
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Matthew Henry · 1662 Complete Commentary on the Whole Bible
It was threatened (Isa 3:25) that the mighty men should fall by the sword in war, and it was threatened as a punishment to the women that affected gaiety and a loose sort of conversation. Now here we have the effect and consequence of that great slaughter of men, 1. That though Providence has so wisely ordered that, communibus annis - on an average of years, there is nearly an equal number of males and females born into the world, yet, through the devastations made by war, there should scarcely be one man in seven left alive. As there are deaths attending the bringing forth of children, which are peculiar to the woman, who was first in transgression, so, to balance that, there are deaths peculiar to men, those by the sword in the high places of the field, which perhaps devour more than child-bed does. Here it is foretold that such multitudes of men should be cut off that there should be seven women to one man. 2. That by reason of the scarcity of men, though marriage should be kept up for the raising of recruits and the preserving of the race of mankind upon earth, yet the usual method of it should be quite altered, - that, whereas men ordinarily make their court to the women, the women should now take hold of the men, foolishly fearing (as Lot's daughters did, when they saw the ruin of Sodom and perhaps thought it reached further than it did) that in a little time there would be none left (Gen 19:31), - that whereas women naturally hate to come in sharers with others, seven should now, by consent, become the wives of one man, - and that whereas by the law the husband was obliged to provide food and raiment for his wife (Exo 21:10), which with many would be the most powerful argument against multiplying wives, these women will be bound to support themselves; they will eat bread of their own earning, and wear apparel of their own working, and the man they court shall be at no expense upon them, only they desire to be called his wives, to take away the reproach of a single life. They are willing to be wives upon any terms, though ever so unreasonable; and perhaps the rather because in these troublesome times it would be a kindness to them to have a husband for their protector. Paul, on the contrary, thinks the single state preferable in a time of distress, Co1 7:26. It were well if this were not introduced here partly as a reflection upon the daughters of Zion, that, notwithstanding the humbling providences they were under (Isa 3:18), they remained unhumbled, and, instead of repenting of their pride and vanity, when God was contending with them for them, all their care was to get husbands - that modesty, which is the greatest beauty of the fair sex, was forgotten, and with them the reproach of vice was nothing to the reproach of virginity, a sad symptom of the irrecoverable desolations of virtue.
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John Gill · 1697 Exposition of the Entire Bible
Introduction
INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH 4 The "first" verse of this chapter Isa 4:1 seems more properly to belong to the preceding chapter, which declares such a scarcity of men, through the destruction of them in war, there predicted, that there should be seven women to one man; who, contrary to their natural modesty, would make suit to him; and, contrary to custom, propose to provide their own food and raiment, only desiring to be called by his name. After which, Isa 4:2, follows a prophecy of Christ, who is described by his names, the branch of the Lord, and the fruit of the earth; and by proper epithets of him, as such, beautiful, glorious, excellent, and comely; and by the persons to whom he is so, the escaped of Israel, to whom various blessings are promised; as the sanctification of them, the source of which is their election, and the means of it the spirit of judgment and burning, Isa 4:3 and the protection and preservation of them, by the Lord's creating, as for Israel of old, a cloud of smoke to rest upon them by day, and a shining of flaming fire by night, and by being himself a tabernacle to screen them from heat in the day, and a place of refuge to cover them from storm and rain, Isa 4:5.
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John Gill · 1697 Exposition of the Entire Bible
And in that day seven women shall take hold of one man,.... Not in the days of Ahaz, when Pekah, son of Remaliah, slew in Judah a hundred and twenty thousand men in one day, Ch2 28:6 as Kimchi thinks; for though there was then such a destruction of men, yet at the same time two hundred thousand women, with sons and daughters, were carried captive by the Israelites, Ch2 28:8 but in the days of Vespasian and Titus, and in the time of their wars with the Jews; in which were made such slaughters of men, that there were not enough left for every woman to have a husband; and therefore "seven", or a great many, sue to one man to marry them, contrary to their natural bashfulness. It is a tradition of the Jews, mentioned both by Jarchi and Kimchi, that Nebuchadnezzar ordered his army, that none of them should marry another man's wife; wherefore every woman sought to get a husband; but the time of this prophecy does not agree with it: saying, we will eat our own bread, and wear our own apparel; which used to be provided for wives by their husbands, and that according to law, Exo 21:10 but rather than be without a husband, they promise, in order to engage him to marry them, to provide food and raiment for themselves, by their own labour. The Arabic version adds, "neither in anything will we be troublesome:'' only let us be called by thy name; let us be married to thee, let us become thy wives; for upon marriage the woman was called by her husband's name: to take away our reproach: of being unmarried, and having no offspring: or it may be rendered in the imperative, "take away our reproach" (l); so the Targum, Septuagint, and Oriental versions. The words may be accommodated in a spiritual sense to some professors of religion, who lay hold on Christ in a professional way, but spend their money for that which is not bread, and live upon their own duties and services, and not on Christ, and wear their own rags of righteousness, and not his robe; only they desire to be called by the name of Christians, to take away the reproach of being reckoned Pagans or infidels. (l) "aufer probrum nostrum", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator; "aufer ignominiam nostram", Cocceius.
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Crkveni oci 2

Victorinus of Pettau · 304 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
Commentary on the Apocalypse of the Blessed John
"And He had in His right hand seven stars." He said that in His right hand He had seven stars, because the Holy Spirit of sevenfold agency was given into His power by the Father. As Peter exclaimed to the Jews: "Being at the right hand of God exalted, He hath shed forth this Spirit received from the Father, which ye both see and hear." Moreover, John the Baptist had also anticipated this, by saying to his disciples: "For God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto Him. The Father," says he, "loveth the Son, and hath given all things into His hands." Those seven stars are the seven churches, which he names in his addresses by name, old calls them to whom he wrote epistles. Not that they are themselves the only, or even the principal churches; but what he says to one, he says to all. For they are in no respect different, that on that ground any one should prefer them to the larger number of similar small ones. In the whole world Paul taught that all the churches are arranged by sevens, that they are called seven, and that the Catholic Church is one. And first of all, indeed, that he himself also might maintain the type of seven churches, he did not exceed that number. But he wrote to the Romans, to the Corinthians, to the Galatians, to the Ephesians, to the Thessalonians, to the Philippians, to the Colossians; afterwards he wrote to individual persons, so as not to exceed the number of seven churches. And abridging in a short space his announcement, he thus says to Timothy: "That thou mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the Church of the living God." We read also that this typical number is announced by the Holy Spirit by the month of Isaiah: "Of seven women which took hold of one man." The one man is Christ, not born of seed; but the seven women are seven churches, receiving His bread, and clothed with his apparel, who ask that their reproach should be taken away, only that His name should be called upon them. The bread is the Holy Spirit, which nourishes to eternal life, promised to them, that is, by faith. And His garments wherewith they desire to be clothed are the glory of immortality, of which Paul the apostle says: "For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on mortality." Moreover, they ask that their reproach may be taken away-that is, that they may be cleansed from their sins: for the reproach is the original sin which is taken away in baptism, and they begin to be called Christian men, which is, "Let thy name be called upon us." Therefore in these seven churches, of one Catholic Church are believers, because it is one in seven by the quality of faith and election. Whether writing to them who labour in the world, and live of the frugality of their labours, and are patient, and when they see certain men in the Church wasters, and pernicious, they hear them, lest there should become dissension, he yet admonishes them by love, that in what respects their faith is deficient they should repent; or to those who dwell in cruel places among persecutors, that they should continue faithful; or to those who, under the pretext of mercy, do unlawful sins in the Church, and make them manifest to be done by others; or to those that are at ease in the Church; or to those who are negligent, and Christians only in name; or to those who are meekly instructed, that they may bravely persevere in faith; or to those who study the Scriptures, and labour to know the mysteries of their announcement, and are unwilling to do God's work that is mercy and love: to all he urges penitence, to all he declares judgment.
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Jerome · 347 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
Commentary on Isaiah
(Chapter IV, Verse 1) And in that day, seven women will take hold of one man, saying: We will eat our own bread and wear our own clothing, only let us be called by your name; take away our reproach. When the most beautiful of the city of Jerusalem fall by the sword and the strong ones perish in battle, and its gates mourn and lament; and it becomes desolate due to the scarcity of people, with the warriors being killed, seven women will take hold of one man, desiring to have offspring in Zion and descendants in Jerusalem. They say that they have food and clothing, only so that they will not appear without a husband and be subject to the curse that is written: Cursed is the barren woman, who does not bear children in Israel (Deuteronomy 7). Zacharias also agrees with this interpretation: In those days, ten men from all the languages of the nations will seize the hem of a Jewish man, saying: We will go with you, for we have heard that God is with you (Zech. VIII, 23). The number seven and ten are familiar to the Jews due to the Sabbath and the Ten Commandments of the law, and therefore they often use them; although according to the ambiguity of the Hebrew language, which interprets the word Saba () as both seven and several or an oath, it may not mean seven in this passage, but rather several. This according to the letter. However, in the coming of the Lord and Savior, the seven women, that is, the seven graces of the Holy Spirit, of whom the same Prophet will speak in the following words: A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. (Isaiah 11:1-2) They will lay hold of Jesus, whom they have long desired, for they could find no other in whom they could find eternal rest. And John the Baptist confirms in the Gospel: And he who sent me said to me: Upon whom you see the Holy Spirit descending and remaining upon him, he is the one (John 1:33). In Zachariah, we also read about a stone with seven eyes, and in a golden candlestick, seven lamps and seven tubes, and two olive trees on either side of the lampstand, firmly rooted (Zechariah 3). However, the grace of the Holy Spirit, possessing all things, does not need explanation. But because he always suffered reproach among men, while no one living was seeking the gifts of the Holy Spirit, therefore they desire to invoke the name of Jesus, so that what was imperfect in the Law may be fulfilled in the Gospel.
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Srednjovekovno 1

Thomas Aquinas · 1225 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
Commentary on Isaiah
133. And in that day seven women shall take hold of one man. After he denounces the calumny of the oppressors in chapters 2 and 3, in this chapter, the prophet sets out the consolation of the oppressed. And this is divided into two parts: in the first, he consoles them against the oppression of women; in the second, against the oppression of tyrants, where it says, in that day (Isa 4:2). 134. Now women are accustomed to be troublesome to men in three matters, namely, in contempt of men, and as to this, he says: and in that day seven women shall take hold: which the Gloss explains literally, that it could have been that after the captivity, many men having been killed, there remained more women than men, so that seven women sought to have one man, below: a man shall be more precious than gold, yea a man than the finest of gold (Isa 13:12). Second, they were accustomed to be troublesome in superfluous food and clothing, and as to this he says: we will eat our own bread, as if to say: it will not be necessary that he give expenses to them: she is like the merchant's ship, she brings her bread from afar. She has sought wool and flax, and has wrought by the counsel of her hands (Prov 31:13–14). Third, they are troublesome in the haughtiness of pride, and as to this he says: only let your name be called upon us, that we may be called your wives, take away our reproach, namely, of barrenness. No one shall be barren among you of either sex, neither of men nor cattle (Deut 7:14). 135. But from this it seems that it may be lawful to have many wives, because the Lord never consoles through something unlawful. Moreover, every sin is unnatural; but for one man to have many wives is natural, because one man can impregnate many women. To this is to be said that, as the Philosopher says, the joining of male and female among men is not only for the sake of generation, as in brute animals, but also for advantage of life: hence male and female have different operations, by which they give help to each other. Therefore, as far as something is otherwise ordered to these ends, so far is it otherwise called natural or unnatural. For that which in no manner can stand with the stated end is entirely unnatural, and never can be good, as the vice of sodomy, and as when one woman has many husbands, since one woman cannot be impregnated by many men, and as regards civil life, because one woman is not ruled by many men, but the contrary. However, something can, considered in itself, stand indifferently in relation to the stated end; and this can be determined in various times in various ways according to various cases by a lawgiver: and it will be the positive just, as with the degrees of consanguinity. 136. There is, however, something through which someone can pursue the end, but which nevertheless impedes the end in the majority of cases. And this is, of itself, unnatural, but it can be lawful according to the dispensation of a lawgiver attending to special cases. And such is it for one man may have wives: for one man can rule many women according to civil life, and one man can impregnate many women; but, nevertheless, something presents an impediment to generation, since it is necessary for the seed of a man to be prepared, and this cannot happen with those engaging frequently in intercourse, because of which such men are frequently sterile. And yet more does it impede common life, because the perfect friendship of the sort which exists between a man and his wife, for whom man even leaves his father and mother (Gen 2:24), cannot be had with many wives. 142. The Gloss, however, touches on a twofold mystery. Some explain the seven women (Isa 4:1) as churches, and according to this, this chapter is divided into three parts: first is placed the espousal; second, the exaltation of the bridegroom, where it says, in that day (Isa 4:2); third, the government of the bridegroom, where it says, and it shall come to pass (Isa 4:3). Now the espousal is through faith: I will espouse you to me in faith (Hos 2:20). Hence he puts forth three things. First, the communication of faith, seven women (Isa 4:1), the seven churches, of which Revelation 1:4 says: John to the seven churches which are in Asia, in which are contained all churches according to the fifth rule of Tyconius, shall take hold, through faith; one man, that is, Christ: I will take hold of you, and bring you into my mother's house, and into the chamber of her that bore me (Song 8:2). Second, the manifestation of hope, which is from receiving the sacrament: we will eat our own bread, the body of Christ given to us: the bread that I will give is my flesh, for the life of the world (John 6:52); and which is from receiving the gift of virtue: we will wear our own apparel, that is, the virtues: I clothed you with embroidery, and shod you with violet colored shoes: . . . and clothed you with fine garments, and I decked you also with ornaments (Ezek 16:10–11). Third, the desire or the petition of charity, which is from the attainment of the name Christian: only let your name be called upon us, as from Christ we are called Christians: there is no other name under heaven . . . whereby we must be saved (Acts 4:12); and from the removal of guilt: take away our reproach, which we suffer from the Jews, who say we are without the law: this day have I taken away from you the reproach of Egypt (Josh 5:9). 143. Note on words, we will eat our own bread (Isa 4:1). That bread gives pardon for our faults: give us this day our supersubstantial bread, and forgive us our debts (Matt 6:11–12); it gives us the life of grace: the bread that I will give is my flesh, for the life of the world (John 6:52); it strengthens us for battle: bread strengthens man's heart (Ps 103[104]:15); it strengthens us for the journey: he walked in the strength of that food forty days and forty nights (1 Kgs 19:8); it gives us a foretaste of glory itself: you gave them bread from heaven, prepared without labor; having in it all that is delicious, and the sweetness of every taste (Wis 16:20). 144. According to other glosses, it is divided thus: in the first part is noted the fullness of grace; in the second, the exaltation of grace, in that day (Isa 4:2); in the third, the good government of subjects is set out, where it says, and it shall come to pass (Isa 4:3). Concerning the first, he does three things. First, he places the abundance of gifts, seven women (Isa 4:1), that is, the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, which are called women because, through them, one is begotten and nourished in God; one man, that is, Christ singularly, who alone is without sin: we saw him as it were of the only begotten, full of grace and truth (John 1:14). Second, the sufficiency of the gifts in perfect enjoyment: we will eat our own bread, namely, of heaven, which the Holy Spirit, to whom the gifts belong, enjoys perfectly, just as the Son does: my meat is to do the will of him that sent me (John 4:34); in the testimony of the Scriptures: and we will wear our own apparel, that is, the word of God, by whom the gifts are furnished. Third, the perfection of the gifts through Christ as to the conferring of salvation: let your name, that is, the thing signified by your name, namely, salvation, be called upon us, that is, upon those—us—who have been filled up, for of his fullness we all have received: grace for grace (John 1:16); for before Christ, the gifts did not lead to the kingdom. As to the removal of errors: take away our reproach, which we suffer from false virtues, which steal our good name: the night is passed and the day is at hand. Let us, therefore cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light (Rom 13:12); catch us the little foxes that destroy the vines (Song 2:15); or the reproach which we suffer in the rejection of men, who, in sinning, reject us. For the Holy Spirit of discipline will flee from the deceitful (Wis 1:5), and added to this, he shall not abide when iniquity comes in.
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Moderno 4

Adam Clarke · 1762 Commentary on the Bible
Introduction
Sequel of the exhortations and promises addressed to Israel in the preceding chapter, Jer 4:1, Jer 4:2. The prophet then addresses the people of Judah and Jerusalem, exhorting to repentance and reformation, that the dreadful visitation with which they were threatened might be averted, Jer 4:3, Jer 4:4. He then sounds the alarm of war, Jer 4:5, Jer 4:6. Nebuchadnezzar, like a fierce lion, is, from the certainty of the prophecy, represented to be on his march; and the disastrous event to have been already declared, Jer 4:7-9. And as the lying prophets had flattered the people with the hopes of peace and safety, they are now introduced, (when their predictions are falsified by the event), excusing themselves; and, with matchless effrontery, laying the blame of the deception upon God, ("And they said," etc., so the text is corrected by Kennicott), Jer 4:10. The prophet immediately resumes his subject; and, in the person of God, denounces again those judgments which were shortly to be inflicted by Nebuchadnezzar, Jer 4:11-18. The approaching desolation of Jerusalem lamented in language amazingly energetic and exquisitely tender, Jer 4:19-21. The incorrigible wickedness of the people the sole cause of these calamities, Jer 4:22. In the remaining verses the prophet describes the sad catastrophe of Jerusalem by such a beautiful assemblage of the most striking and afflictive circumstances as form a picture of a land "swept with the besom of destruction." The earth seems ready to return to its original chaos; every ray of light is extinguished, and succeeded by a frightful gloom; the mountains tremble, and the hills shake, under the dreadful apprehension of the wrath of Jehovah; all is one awful solitude, where not a vestige of the human race is to be seen. Even the fowls of heaven, finding no longer whereon to subsist, are compelled to migrate; the most fruitful places are become a dark and dreary desert, and every city is a ruinous heap. To complete the whole, the dolorous shrieks of Jerusalem, as of a woman in peculiar agony, break through the frightful gloom; and the appalled prophet pauses, leaving the reader to reflect on the dreadful effects of apostasy and idolatry, Jer 4:23-31.
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Adam Clarke · 1762 Commentary on the Bible
And seven women - The division of the chapters has interrupted the prophet's discourse, and broken it off almost in the midst of the sentence. "The numbers slain in battle shall be so great, that seven women shall be left to one man." The prophet has described the greatness of this distress by images and adjuncts the most expressive and forcible. The young women, contrary to their natural modesty, shall become suitors to the men: they will take hold of them, and use the most pressing importunity to be married. In spite of the natural suggestions of jealousy, they will be content with a share only of the rights of marriage in common with several others; and that on hard conditions, renouncing the legal demands of the wife on the husband, (see Exo 21:10), and begging only the name and credit of wedlock, and to be freed from the reproach of celibacy. See Isa 54:4, Isa 54:5. Like Marcia, on a different occasion, and in other circumstances: - Da tantum nomen inane Connubii: liceat tumulo scripsisse, Catonis Marcia. Lucan, 2:342. "This happened," says Kimchi, "in the days of Ahaz, when Pekah the son of Remaliah slew in Judea one hundred and twenty thousand men in one day; see Ch2 18:6. The widows which were left were so numerous that the prophet said, 'They are multiplied beyond the sand of the sea,'" Jer 15:8. In that day - These words are omitted in the Septuagint, and MSS.
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Jamieson, Fausset & Brown · 1802 Critical and Explanatory Commentary o…
Introduction
(Isa 4:1-6) In contrast to those on whom vengeance falls, there is a manifestation of Jesus Christ to the "escaped of Israel" in His characteristic attributes, beauty and glory, typified in Aaron's garments (Exo 28:2). Their sanctification is promised as the fruit of their being "written" in the book of life by sovereign love (Isa 4:3); the means of it are the "spirit of judgment" and that of "burning" (Isa 4:4). Their "defense" by the special presence of Jesus Christ is promised (Isa 4:5-6). branch--the sprout of JEHOVAH. Messiah (Jer 23:5; Jer 33:15; Zac 3:8; Zac 6:12; Luk 1:78, Margin). The parallel clause does not, as MAURER objects, oppose this; for "fruit of the earth" answers to "branch"; He shall not be a dry, but a fruit-bearing branch (Isa 27:6; Eze 34:23-27). He is "of the earth" in His birth and death, while He is also "of the Lord" (Jehovah) (Joh 12:24). His name, "the Branch," chiefly regards His descent from David, when the family was low and reduced (Luk 2:4, Luk 2:7, Luk 2:24); a sprout with more than David's glory, springing as from a decayed tree (Isa 11:1; Isa 53:2; Rev 22:16). excellent-- (Heb 1:4; Heb 8:6). comely-- (Sol 5:15-16; Eze 16:14). escaped of Israel--the elect remnant (Rom 11:5); (1) in the return from Babylon; (2) in the escape from Jerusalem's destruction under Titus; (3) in the still future assault on Jerusalem, and deliverance of "the third part"; events mutually analogous, like concentric circles (Zac 12:2-10; Zac 13:8-9, &c.; Zac 14:2; Eze 39:23-29; Joel 3:1-21).
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Keil & Delitzsch · 1807 Biblical Commentary on the Old Testam…
When war shall thus unsparingly have swept away the men of Zion, a most unnatural effect will ensue, namely, that women will go in search of husbands, and not men in search of wives. "And seven women lay hold of one man in that day, saying, We will eat our won bread, and wear our own clothes; only let thy name be named upon us, take away our reproach." The division of the chapters is a wrong one here, as this v. is the closing v. of the prophecy against the women, and the closing portion of the whole address does not begin till Isa 4:2. The present pride of the daughters of Zion, every one of whom now thought herself the greatest as the wife of such and such a man, and for whom many men were now the suitors, would end in this unnatural self-humiliation, that seven of them would offer themselves to the same man, the first man who presented himself, and even renounce the ordinary legal claim upon their husband for clothing and food (Exo 21:10). It would be quite sufficient for them to be allowed to bear his name ("let thy name be named upon us:" the name is put upon the thing named, as giving it its distinctness and character), if he would only take away their reproach (namely, the reproach of being unmarried, Isa 54:4, as in Gen 30:23, of being childless) by letting them be called his wives. The number seven (seven women to one man) may be explained on the ground that there is a bad seven as well as a holy one (e.g., Mat 12:45). In Isa 4:1 the threat denounced against the women of Jerusalem is brought to a close. It is the side-piece to the threat denounced against the national rulers. And these two scenes of judgment were only parts of the general judgment about to fall upon Jerusalem and Judah, as a state or national community. And this again was merely a portion, viz., the central group of the picture of a far more comprehensive judgment, which was about to fall upon everything lofty and exalted on the earth. Jerusalem, therefore, stands here as the centre and focus of the great judgment-day. It was in Jerusalem that the ungodly glory which was ripe for judgment was concentrated; and it was in Jerusalem also that the light of the true and final glory would concentrate itself. To this promise, with which the address returns to its starting-point, the prophet now passes on without any further introduction. In fact it needed no introduction, for the judgment in itself was the medium of salvation. When Jerusalem was judged, it would be sifted; and by being sifted, it would be rescued, pardoned, glorified. The prophet proceeds in this sense to speak of what would happen in that day, and describes the one great day of God at the end of time (not a day of four-and-twenty hours any more than the seven days of creation were), according to its general character, as opening with judgment, but issuing in salvation.
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