Lectionary Calendar
Friday, May 9th, 2025
the Third Week after Easter
the Third Week after Easter
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Bible Commentaries
Kingcomments on the Whole Bible Kingcomments
Copyright Statement
Kingcomments on the Whole Bible © 2021 Author: G. de Koning. All rights reserved. Used with the permission of the author
No part of the publications may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the author.
Kingcomments on the Whole Bible © 2021 Author: G. de Koning. All rights reserved. Used with the permission of the author
No part of the publications may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the author.
Bibliographical Information
de Koning, Ger. Commentaar op Isaiah 17". "Kingcomments on the Whole Bible". https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/kng/isaiah-17.html. 'Stichting Titus' / 'Stichting Uitgeverij Daniël', Zwolle, Nederland. 2021.
de Koning, Ger. Commentaar op Isaiah 17". "Kingcomments on the Whole Bible". https://www.studylight.org/
Whole Bible (44)Old Testament (1)Individual Books (4)
Verses 1-3
Introduction
The prophecies in this chapter are about two nations north of Judah: Damascus (Syria) and Ephraim (the ten tribes realm). These two are described at the same time because they formed an alliance (Isaiah 7:1). It is a biblical principle that he who has fellowship with the sins of someone also shares in the judgment on those sins (Revelation 18:4). For the believing remnant in the future, this is a warning not to put their trust in people, that is, in Babylon, the restored Roman Empire, Europe.
Prophecy About Damascus
These verses give a short âburden of Damascusâ (Isaiah 17:1). The judgment, again carried out by Assyria, is not only about Damascus, the capital of Aram or Syria, but also about âthe cities of Aroerâ (Isaiah 17:2). The judgment will result in the whole area being completely deserted, so that the flocks will be able to lie down there, without being frightened.
Damascus is in the days of Isaiah connected with the ten tribes. This is expressed in Isaiah 17:3 in two ways: âEphraimâ â âDamascusâ and âAramâ (i.e. the Syrians) â âthe sons of Israelâ. A common intention implies a common fate (Isaiah 7:1; Isaiah 7:4). Just as âthe glory of the sons of Israelâ, which was visible in the fortified cities, has vanished, so will ally Syria. Because of that connection, the judgment on Ephraim follows directly in the following verses.
Verses 4-6
Judgment on Ephraim
After the judgment on Israelâs ally Syria, Isaiah speaks about the judgment that Assyria will bring on Israel, or Ephraim (2 Kings 15:29). This section is the first of three sections beginning with âin that dayâ (Isaiah 17:4). The other two sections are Isaiah 17:7-Ruth : and Isaiah 17:9-1 Kings :. That expression almost always refers to the end time.
All the glory of Ephraim, âthe glory of Jacobâ, will fade. âThe fatness of his fleshâ refers to wealth and prosperity. Ephraim has a prosperous time under King Jerobeam II, but that prosperity will disappear. The people will become lean. Prophetic it is about the destruction of the north of Israel at the time of the invasion of the king of the North.
The destruction is drawn in three paintings. The first is the picture of a fat person who is now emaciated and literally skin over bone, from whom all the fatness of the flesh has shrunk. The fatness speaks of prosperity. After the judgment (Isaiah 17:5) poverty will remain (Isaiah 17:6; Leviticus 19:9; Deuteronomy 24:19-Song of Solomon :).
The second picture is that of the grain harvest. After the harvest, the remains are picked up by the poor. What is collected is very little. The very fertile valley Rephaim (Joshua 15:8) is located near Jerusalem, on its southwestern side.
The third picture is that of the olive harvest. Olives are harvested by picking them by hand and picking the fallen fruit. Then the tree is shaken, which is done by beating the tree with sticks (a picture of judgment). After harvesting, you can count the rest of the olives left on the fingers of one hand.
The deeper meaning of the gleaning is that after the judgment on the population only a little remnant remains. That is what âthe LORD, the God of Israelâ declares. This Name reminds us that the God of the promises made to the patriarchs has an intention that goes beyond the temporary judgments.
Verses 7-8
Conversion of a Remnant
For the gleaning, which is the remnant of Isaiah 17:6, there is hope. This brings us back in a direct way to the distant future, the end time. This remnant will be like a man who, after much deviation, turns his gaze back to the LORD (Isaiah 17:7). That will happen in its fullness when the Lord Jesus comes back and they will see Him âwhom they have piercedâ (Zechariah 12:10). That is repentance.
We see it with the prodigal son who, when he is with the swine in the deepest misery, comes âto his sensesâ and thinks of his father again (Luke 15:16-Job :). He turns his back on his life in sin and goes to his father. A real return goes hand in hand with giving up idolatry (Isaiah 17:8). Through the terror and suffering of war, they will see that idols do not help. These idols are âmade in Israelâ (Isaiah 2:8) and find their climax in the picture of the beast (Revelation 13:14-Ezra :).
The contrast between âhis Makerâ (Isaiah 17:7) and âthat which his fingers have madeâ (Isaiah 17:8) is striking. What the LORD has made, His people, remains; what man has made, his idol, shall perish. He will no longer look on it. How foolish man is to enter into a relationship with a god who is the work of his own hands. In our time we recognize this in modern theology.
Verses 9-11
Judgment on the Mass
In these verses we see that while there is hope for a remnant, judgment will come over the apostate masses because they have forgotten the God of their salvation. Their strong cities, which they see as a fortress and in which they feel safe, will not be able to protect them from the enemy (Isaiah 17:9). The cities will be overpowered by the king of the North and the inhabitants will be expelled. The cities will be deserted and become a desolation.
They have planted âdelightful plantsâ â freely translated as âimported cuttingsâ. In a literal sense, this can refer to the transfer of, for example, vines from another country. In a spiritual sense it means that they have adopted the norms and values of heathen peoples and put their trust in them (Isaiah 17:10). For their prosperity they have adopted methods (altars) from the surrounding peoples and put their trust in their power, while ignoring God. If God is forgotten, the result is barrenness and fruitlessness. Whoever trusts in a human rock and forgets God as his âthe rock of your refugeâ, is deceived. But âthose who trust in the LORD Are as Mount Zion, which cannot be moved but abides foreverâ (Psalms 125:1).
The same goes for the results of our work. There may still be so much activity, there will be no lasting fruit if we forget that we depend on Him for all good. If we lose sight of the Source of our strength, the âRock of our refuge or strengthâ we bring âsickliness and incurable painâ upon ourselves (Isaiah 17:11). In the âincurable painâ we can see the remorse that we did not involve Him in our plans, while we knew well with Whom we had to be with. It is the regret afterwards of an irreversible decision.
In the future God will have to judge them. That will happen by bringing this âday of sickliness and incurable painâ over His people, which happens when the hostile king of the North enters Israel like a dyke breakthrough. We see that in the following verses.
Verses 12-14
The Fate of the Plunderers
These verses indicate the end time again. âThe uproar of many peoplesâ is presented as âthe roaring of the seasâ (Isaiah 17:12; cf. Isaiah 57:20; Revelation 17:15). âThe rumbling of nationsâ is presented as âthe rumbling of mighty watersâ. Here we see how God uses His control over nature to portray His control over history. This is about the âuproar of many peoplesâ who will fight against Israel, but at the heart âtake counsel together Against the LORD and against His Anointedâ (Psalms 2:1-Exodus :).
The nullity of all those hostile powers appears when He ârebukesâ them (Isaiah 17:13). Then they flee far away as âchaffâ that is âchased ⊠in the mountains before the windâ and as âwhirling dust before a galeâ. When He rises, they are nowhere.
âAt evening timeâ, at the end of a day of advance, there is horror when the LORD appears and defeats the enemy once and for all (Isaiah 17:14). âBefore the morningâ dawns of the day on which the enemy wants to attack, âthey are no moreâ. Through a sudden intervention of the LORD the enemy has come to his end (Isaiah 37:36-Zechariah :). Both in the days of Hezekiah and in the end time, his dream of the dawn of a glorious morning will fade away.
Earlier it is mainly about Assyria itself (Isaiah 14:22-Jeremiah :); here (Isaiah 17:12-2 Chronicles :) it is about the alliance of many peoples led by North Arab and Islamic (possibly Shiite) countries, with behind it the power of Russia (Gog and Magog). It is about the Assyrian armies and their allies plundering and robbing Judah, âusâ. Prophetically we find this event in the book Daniel (Daniel 11:45).
When Jerusalem is surrounded by the nations, night threatens to fall over the city. But then the salvation of the LORD will come and âit will come about that at evening time there will be lightâ (Zechariah 14:7). The night will not fall over the city; the threatening darkness will flee from before Him Whose feet will stand on the Mount of Olives. Then it will always be light, because the âSun of righteousnessâ has appeared (Malachi 4:2). This is how it happened in the life of their ancestor Jacob, after he had his time of âgreat tribulationâ: âNow the sun rose upon him just as he crossed over Penuelâ (Genesis 32:31).