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Saturday, May 10th, 2025
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Read the Bible

Smith Van Dyke Version

إِشَعْيَاءَ 20:6

ويقول ساكن هذا الساحل في ذلك اليوم هوذا هكذا ملجأنا الذي هربنا اليه للمعونة لننجوا من ملك اشور فكيف نسلم نحن

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Egypt;   Ethiopia;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Hope;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Ethiopia;   Isle, Island;   Nahum;   Prophets;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Ethiopia;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Island;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Hezekiah;   Merodach Baladan;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Ashdod;   Hezekiah;   Isaiah;   Kings, 1 and 2;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Island, Isle;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Egypt;   Ethiopia;   No-amon;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Isle;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Coast;   Isaiah;   Island;   Lachish;   Kitto Biblical Cyclopedia - Assyria;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Ashdod;  

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

isle: or, country, Job 22:30, Jeremiah 47:4

whither: Isaiah 28:17, Isaiah 30:1-7, Isaiah 30:15, Isaiah 30:16, Isaiah 31:1-3, Job 6:20

and how: Matthew 23:33, 1 Thessalonians 5:3, Hebrews 2:3

Reciprocal: Isaiah 10:3 - And what Isaiah 30:2 - walk Isaiah 30:5 - General Isaiah 36:6 - General Jeremiah 4:30 - And when Jeremiah 5:31 - and what Jeremiah 22:20 - and cry Jeremiah 46:25 - and all Ezekiel 29:6 - a staff Zechariah 9:5 - for Philemon 1:15 - General

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And the inhabitants of this isle shall say, in that day,.... Not of Ashdod, Isaiah 20:1 or the isle of Caphtor, Jeremiah 47:4 but the land of Israel, as both Jarchi and Kimchi interpret it; so called, because it bordered on the sea, as such countries are sometimes called isles; see Jeremiah 25:22. Ben Melech interprets it of Jerusalem, and observes that the word signifies a place or country, whether it has a river or sea encompassing it, or not; besides, the land of Canaan had the Mediterranean sea on one side of it, and the sea of Galilee and Tiberias on the other, and was moreover separated from all other countries by the power, providence, and presence of God:

behold, such [is] our expectation, whither we flee for help, to be delivered from the king of Assyria; signifying that it was vain and foolish, and they had acted a very weak, as well as a wicked part, in having recourse to the Egyptians and Ethiopians to help them against the Assyrians, as it plainly appeared by both nations now being conquered by them:

and how shall we escape? seeing they had not, who were more powerful than they were; and how could they think that they could save them, who could not save themselves? and so the Targum,

"if they have not delivered their souls (themselves), how shall we be delivered?''

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

And the inhabitant - The dwellers generally.

Of this isle - The word אי 'iy “isle” is used here in the sense of “coast, or maritime” country, and is evidently applied to Palestine, or the land of Canaan, which is a narrow coast lying on the Mediterranean. That the word is often used in this sense, and may be applied to a maritime country, see the notes at Isaiah 13:22; Isaiah 41:1. The connection here requires us to understand it of Palestine.

Shall say ... - Shall condemn their own folly in trusting in Egypt, and seeking deliverance there.

And how shall we escape? - They shall be alarmed for their own safety, for the very nation on which they had relied had been made captive. And when the “stronger” had been subdued, how could the feeble and dependent escape a similar overthrow and captivity? All this was designed to show them the folly of trusting in the aid of another nation, and to lead them to put confidence in the God of their fathers.


 
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