1
The
burden of Egypt."Behold, the LORD rides on a swift cloud, and comes to Egypt. The idols of
Egypt will tremble at his presence; and the
heart of Egypt will melt within it.
+2
I will stir up the Egyptians against the Egyptians, and they will fight everyone against his brother, and everyone against his neighbor; city against city, and kingdom against kingdom. +
3
The
spirit of Egypt will fail within it. I will destroy its counsel. They will seek the idols, the charmers, those who have familiar spirits, and the wizards.
+4
I will give over the Egyptians into the hand of a cruel lord. A fierce king will rule over them," says the Lord, the LORD of Hosts. +
5
The waters will fail from the sea, and the
river will be wasted and become dry.
+6
The rivers will become foul. The streams of Egypt will be diminished and dried up. The reeds and flags will wither away. +
7
The meadows by the Nile, by the brink of the Nile, and all the sown fields of the Nile, will become dry, be driven away, and be no more. +
8
The fishermen will lament, and all those who fish in the Nile will mourn, and those who spread nets on the waters will languish. +
9
Moreover those who work in combed flax, and those who weave
white cloth, will be confounded.
+10
The pillars will be broken in pieces. All those who work for hire will be grieved in soul. +
11
The princes of Zoan are utterly foolish. The counsel of the wisest counselors of
Pharaoh has become stupid. How do you say to Pharaoh, "I am the son of the wise, the son of ancient kings?"
+12
Where then are your wise men? Let them tell you now; and let them know what the LORD of Hosts has purposed concerning Egypt. +
13
The princes of Zoan have become fools. The princes of
Memphis are deceived. They have caused Egypt to go astray, who are the cornerstone of her tribes.
+14
The LORD has mixed a spirit of perverseness in the middle of her; and they have caused Egypt to go astray in all of its works, like a drunken man staggers in his vomit. +
15
Neither shall there be any work for Egypt, which head or tail, palm
branch or rush, may do.
+16
In that day the Egyptians will be like women. They will tremble and fear because of the shaking of the LORD of Hosts's hand, which he shakes over them. +
17
The land of
Judah will become a terror to Egypt. Everyone to whom mention is made of it will be afraid, because of the plans of the LORD of Hosts, which he determines against it.
+18
In that day, there will be five cities in the land of Egypt that speak the language of Canaan, and swear to the LORD of Hosts. One will be called "The city of destruction." +
19
In that day, there will be an
altar to the LORD in the middle of the land of Egypt, and a
pillar to the LORD at its border.
+20
It will be for a sign and for a
witness to the LORD of Hosts in the land of Egypt; for they will cry to the LORD because of oppressors, and he will send them a savior and a defender, and he will deliver them.
+21
The LORD will be known to Egypt, and the Egyptians will know the LORD in that day. Yes, they will
worship with
sacrifice and offering, and will vow a vow to The LORD, and will perform it.
+22
The LORD will strike Egypt, striking and healing. They will return to The LORD, and he will be entreated by them, and will heal them. +
23
In that day there will be a
highway out of Egypt to Assyria, and the Assyrian shall come into Egypt, and the Egyptian into Assyria; and the Egyptians will worship with the Assyrians.
+24
In that day,
Israel will be the third with Egypt and with Assyria, a blessing within the earth;
+25
because the LORD of Hosts has blessed them, saying, "Blessed be Egypt my people,
Assyria the work of my hands, and Israel my inheritance."
+
Isa 19:1-25.
The nineteenth and twentieth chapters are connected, but with an interval between. Egypt had been held by an Ethiopian dynasty, Sabacho, Sevechus, or Sabacho II, and Tirhakah, for forty or fifty years. Sevechus (called So, the ally of Hoshea, 2Ki 17:4), retired from Lower Egypt on account of the resistance of the priests; and perhaps also, as the Assyrians threatened Lower Egypt. On his withdrawal, Sethos, one of the priestly caste, became supreme, having Tanis ("Zoan") or else Memphis as his capital, 718 B.C.; while the Ethiopians retained Upper Egypt, with Thebes as its capital, under Tirhakah. A third native dynasty was at Sais, in the west of Lower Egypt; to this at a later period belonged Psammetichus, the first who admitted Greeks into Egypt and its armies; he was one of the dodecarchy, a number of petty kings between whom Egypt was divided, and by aid of foreign auxiliaries overcame the rest, 670 B.C. To the divisions at this last time, GESENIUS refers Isa 19:2; and Psammetichus, Isa 19:4, "a cruel lord." The dissensions of the ruling castes are certainly referred to. But the time referred to is much earlier than that of Psammetichus. In Isa 19:1, the invasion of Egypt is represented as caused by "the Lord"; and in Isa 19:17, "Judah" is spoken of as "a terror to Egypt," which it could hardly have been by itself. Probably, therefore, the Assyrian invasion of Egypt under Sargon, when Judah was the ally of Assyria, and Hezekiah had not yet refused tribute as he did in the beginning of Sennacherib's reign, is meant. That Assyria was in Isaiah's mind appears from the way in which it is joined with Israel and Egypt in the worship of Jehovah (Isa 19:24, 25). Thus the dissensions referred to (Isa 19:2) allude to the time of the withdrawal of the Ethiopians from Lower Egypt, probably not without a struggle, especially with the priestly caste; also to the time when Sethos usurped the throne and entered on the contest with the military caste, by the aid of the town populations: when the Saitic dynasty was another cause of division. Sargon's reign was between 722-715 B.C. answering to 718 B.C., when Sethos usurped his throne [G. V. SMITH].
1. burden--(See on Isa 13:1).
upon . . . cloud-- (Ps 104:3; 18:10).
come into Egypt--to inflict vengeance. "Egypt," in Hebrew, Misraim, plural form, to express the two regions of Egypt. BUNSEN observes, The title of their kings runs thus: "Lord of Upper and Lower Egypt."
idols--the bull, crocodile, &c. The idols poetically are said to be "moved" with fear at the presence of one mightier than even they were supposed to be (Ex 12:12; Jer 43:12).