the Week of Proper 11 / Ordinary 16
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IsaÃas 16:8
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- CondensedParallel Translations
Porque los campos de Hesbón fueron talados, y las vides de Sibma; señores de gentes hollaron sus generosos sarmientos; habían llegado hasta Jazer, y extendídose por el desierto; extendiéronse sus plantas, pasaron la mar.
Porque los campos de Hesbón se han marchitado, también las vides de Sibma; los señores de las naciones pisotearon sus mejores sarmientos; habían llegado hasta Jazer, y se habían extendido por el desierto; se extendieron sus plantas, pasaron el mar.
Porque las vides de Hesbón fueron taladas, y las vides de Sibma; señores de los gentiles hollaron sus generosos sarmientos; que habían llegado hasta Jazer, y se cundieron por el desierto; sus nobles plantas se extendieron; pasaron el mar.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
the fields: Isaiah 15:4, Isaiah 24:7, 2 Samuel 1:21
the vine: Isaiah 16:9, Numbers 32:38
Sibmah: Joshua 13:19
the lords: Isaiah 10:7, Jeremiah 27:6, Jeremiah 27:7
Jazer: Numbers 32:3, Joshua 13:25
stretched out: or, plucked up
Reciprocal: Genesis 21:14 - wandered Numbers 21:25 - in Heshbon Numbers 21:32 - Jaazer Numbers 32:1 - Jazer Joshua 21:39 - Jazer 2 Samuel 24:5 - Jazer Jeremiah 48:2 - Heshbon Jeremiah 48:17 - bemoan Jeremiah 48:32 - vine
Gill's Notes on the Bible
For the fields of Heshbon languish,.... Through drought; or because of the forage of the enemy, and their treading upon them; or because there were no men left to till and manure them. Of Heshbon
:-. It seems to have been a place famous for fields and pastures, and to have been a very fruitful and well watered place; hence we read of the fish pools in Heshbon, Song of Solomon 7:4 though Aben Ezra and Kimchi think the word signifies vines, as they suppose it does in Deuteronomy 32:32:
[and] the vine of Sibmah; called Shebam and Shibmah, in
Numbers 32:3 thought to be the Seba of Ptolemy e; and seems to have been famous for vines and vineyards:
the lords of the Heathen have broken down the principal plants thereof; that is, the Chaldeans and their army, and commanders and principal officers of it, dealing with them as the Turks do with vines, wherever they meet with them, destroy them; though Jarchi and Kimchi interpret all this figuratively, both here and in the above clauses, of the inhabitants of these places, the multitude of the common people, and their princes, some being killed, and others carried captive; to which sense the Targum,
"because the armies of Heshbon are spoiled, the multitude of Sebama are killed, the kings of the people have killed their rulers:''
they are come [even] unto Jazer; meaning either the Chaldean army, or the Moabites, who had fled hither; or rather this is to be understood of the vines of Sibmah, expressing the excellency and large spread of them, which reached even to Jazer; which, as Jerom says f, was fifteen miles from Heshbon, called Jaazer, Numbers 21:32:
they wandered [through] the wilderness; the wilderness of Moab, Deuteronomy 2:8 not the lords of the Heathen, nor the Moabites, but the vines and their branches, which crept along, and winded to and fro, as men wander about:
her branches are stretched out; that is, the branches of the vine Sibmah:
they are gone over the sea; the Dead Sea, called the sea of Jazer,
Jeremiah 48:32 or rather a lake near that city.
e Geograph. l. 5. c. 19. f De locis Hebraicis, fol. 92. G.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
For the fields of Heshbon - (See the note at Isaiah 15:4.)
Languish - They are parched up with drought. The âfieldsâ here evidently mean âvineyards,â for so the parallelism demands. So in Deuteronomy 32:32 :
Their vine is of the vine of Sodom,
And of the fields of Gomorrah.
And the vine of Sibmah - Sibmah, or Shibmah, was a city of Reuben Numbers 32:38; Joshua 13:19. Jeremiah, in the parallel place Jeremiah 48:32 speaks of the vine of Sibmah also. He also says that the enemies of Moab had taken Sibmah, and that the vine and wine had been destroyed Jeremiah 48:33. There was no more certain mode of producing desolation in a land where grapes were extensively cultivated than to cut down the vines. The Turks constantly practice that in regard to their enemies, and the result is, that wide desolation comes upon the countries which they invade. At this time it is probable that Sibmah belonged to the Moabites. It is mentioned here as being distinguished for the luxuriant production of the grape. Seetzen still found the vine cultivated in that region. Jerome says, that between Sibmah and Heshbon there was scarcely a distance of five hundred paces, half a Roman mile.
The lords of the heathen - The princes of the pagan nations that had come to invade Moab. The words âhave broken downâ (××××Ö¼ haÌlemuÌ) may be taken in either of two senses, either to beat, strike, or break down, as in our version; or âto beâ beaten, or smitten with wine - that is, to become intoxicated - like the Greek οιÌνοÏληÌξ oinopleÌx - âsmitten with wine.â The former is doubtless the sense here.
The principal plants thereof - The chose vines of it - âher sorekâ (ש×ר×Ö¼×§×× s'eruÌqehaÌ). (See the notes at Isaiah 5:2.)
They are come - That is, the vines of Sibmah had spread or extended themselves even to Jazer, indicating their great luxuriance and fertility.â Jazer was a city at the foot of the mountains of Gilead which was given to Gad, and afterward to the Levites Joshua 21:39. Jerome says it was about fifteen miles from Heshbon. Seetzen found the ruins of a city called Szar, and another place called Szir, from which a small stream (Nahar Szir) flows into the Jordan (Gesenius). That the shoots of the vine of Sibmah reached unto Jazer and the desert, is a beautiful poetic expression for the extensive spread and luxuriance of the vine in that region.
They wandered - The vines âwanderedâ in the desert. They found no twig or tree to which they could attach themselves, and they spread around in wild luxuriancy.
Through the wilderness - The wilderness or desert of Arabia, which encompassed Moab.
Her branches are stretched out - Are extended far, or are very luxuriant.
They are gone over the sea - Called in the parallel place in Jeremiah 48:32, âthe Sea of Jazer;â probably some lake that had that name near the city of Jazer. It may âpossiblyâ mean the Dead Sea, but that name is not elsewhere given to the Dead Sea in the Scriptures. It has been objected by some to this statement that modern travelers have not found any such place as the âSea of Jazer;â or any lake in the vicinity of Jazer. But we may observe -
(1) that Seetzen found a stream flowing into the Jordan near Jazer; and
(2) that it is possible that a pond or lake may have once there existed which may have been since, in the course of ages, filled with sand.
It is known, for example, that in the vicinity of Suez the ancient narrow gulf there, and the large inland sea made by the Bitter lakes, have been choked up by the sand of the desert. Seetzen also says that he saw some pools near the source of the stream called Nahar Szir (âriver Szirâ). Prof. Stuart. âBib. Rep.â vol. vii. p. 158. The whole description of the vines of Sibmah is poetic; designed, not to be literally understood, but to denote their remarkable luxuriance and fertility. A similar description of a âvineâ - though there used to denote the Jewish people - occurs in Psalms 80:8-11 :
Thou hast brought a vine out of Egypt;
Thou hast cast out the heathen and planted it;
Thou preparedst room before it,
And didst cause it to take deep root,
And it filled the land.
The hills were covered with the shadow of it,
And the boughs thereof were like the goodly cedars.
She sent out her boughs unto the sea,
And her branches unto the river.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Isaiah 16:8. Languish - "Are put to shame"] Here the text of Jeremiah leaves us much at a loss, in a place that seems to be greatly corrupted. The Septuagint join the two last words of this verse with the beginning of the following. Their rendering is: και Î¿Ï Îº ενÏÏαÏηÏÎ·Í , Ïα Ïεδια ÎÏεβÏν. For ×× ach they must have read al; otherwise, how came they by the negative, which seems not to belong to this place? Neither is it easy to make sense of the rest without a small alteration, by reading, instead of ενÏÏαÏηÏÎ·Í Ïα, ενÏÏαÏηÏεÏαι. In a word, the Arabic version taken from the Septuagint, plainly authorizes this reading of the Septuagint, and without the negative; and it is fully confirmed by MSS. Pachom. and I. D. II., which have both of them ενÏÏαÏηÏεÏαι Ïεδια ÎÏεβÏν, without the negative; which makes an excellent sense, and, I think, gives us the true reading of the Hebrew text; ×× × ×××× ×©×××ת ×ש××× ak nichlemu shadmoth cheshbon. They frequently render the verb × ××× nichlam by ενÏÏεÏομαι. And × ×××× nichlemu answers perfectly well to ×××× umlal, the parallel word in the next line. The MSS. vary in expressing the word × ×××× nechaim, which gives no tolerable sense in this place; one reads × ××××× nochaim; two others ××××× bechaim; in another the × caph is upon a rasure of two letters; and the Vulgate instead of it reads ××××ª× mecotham, plagas suas. - L.
For the men of Kirhares ye shall make a moan. For the fields of Heshbon are put to shame. This is Bp. Lowth's sense of the passage.
Her branches are stretched out - "Her branches extended themselves."] For × ××©× nitteshu, a MS. has × ××©× niggeshu; which may perhaps be right. Compare Jeremiah 48:32, which has in this part of the sentence the synonymous word × ××¢× nagau.
The meaning of this verse is, that the wines of Sibmah and Heshbon were greatly celebrated, and in high repute with all the great men and princes of that and the neighbouring countries; who indulged themselves even to intemperance in the use of them. So that their vines were so much in request as not only to be propagated all over the country of Moab to the sea of Sodom, but to have scions of them sent even beyond the sea into foreign countries.
×××× halemu, knocked down, demolished; that is overpowered, intoxicated. The drunkards of Ephraim are called by the prophet, Isaiah 28:1, ××××× ××× halumey yayin, drinkers of wine. See Schultens on Proverbs 23:25. Grotius, speaking of the Mareotic wine, says of it,
Pharios quae fregit noxia reges. CYNEG. 312.