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A Prophecy of Deliverance from Foes

33

Ah, you destroyer,

who yourself have not been destroyed;

you treacherous one,

with whom no one has dealt treacherously!

When you have ceased to destroy,

you will be destroyed;

and when you have stopped dealing treacherously,

you will be dealt with treacherously.

 

2

O L ord, be gracious to us; we wait for you.

Be our arm every morning,

our salvation in the time of trouble.

3

At the sound of tumult, peoples fled;

before your majesty, nations scattered.

4

Spoil was gathered as the caterpillar gathers;

as locusts leap, they leaped upon it.

5

The L ord is exalted, he dwells on high;

he filled Zion with justice and righteousness;

6

he will be the stability of your times,

abundance of salvation, wisdom, and knowledge;

the fear of the L ord is Zion’s treasure.

 

7

Listen! the valiant cry in the streets;

the envoys of peace weep bitterly.

8

The highways are deserted,

travelers have quit the road.

The treaty is broken,

its oaths are despised,

its obligation is disregarded.

9

The land mourns and languishes;

Lebanon is confounded and withers away;

Sharon is like a desert;

and Bashan and Carmel shake off their leaves.

 

10

“Now I will arise,” says the L ord,

“now I will lift myself up;

now I will be exalted.

11

You conceive chaff, you bring forth stubble;

your breath is a fire that will consume you.

12

And the peoples will be as if burned to lime,

like thorns cut down, that are burned in the fire.”

 

13

Hear, you who are far away, what I have done;

and you who are near, acknowledge my might.

14

The sinners in Zion are afraid;

trembling has seized the godless:

“Who among us can live with the devouring fire?

Who among us can live with everlasting flames?”

15

Those who walk righteously and speak uprightly,

who despise the gain of oppression,

who wave away a bribe instead of accepting it,

who stop their ears from hearing of bloodshed

and shut their eyes from looking on evil,

16

they will live on the heights;

their refuge will be the fortresses of rocks;

their food will be supplied, their water assured.

 

The Land of the Majestic King

17

Your eyes will see the king in his beauty;

they will behold a land that stretches far away.

18

Your mind will muse on the terror:

“Where is the one who counted?

Where is the one who weighed the tribute?

Where is the one who counted the towers?”

19

No longer will you see the insolent people,

the people of an obscure speech that you cannot comprehend,

stammering in a language that you cannot understand.

20

Look on Zion, the city of our appointed festivals!

Your eyes will see Jerusalem,

a quiet habitation, an immovable tent,

whose stakes will never be pulled up,

and none of whose ropes will be broken.

21

But there the L ord in majesty will be for us

a place of broad rivers and streams,

where no galley with oars can go,

nor stately ship can pass.

22

For the L ord is our judge, the L ord is our ruler,

the L ord is our king; he will save us.

 

23

Your rigging hangs loose;

it cannot hold the mast firm in its place,

or keep the sail spread out.

 

Then prey and spoil in abundance will be divided;

even the lame will fall to plundering.

24

And no inhabitant will say, “I am sick”;

the people who live there will be forgiven their iniquity.


12. And the peoples shall be the burnings of lime. He compares them to “the burning of lime,” because their hardness shall be bruised, as fire softens the stones, so that they shall easily be reduced to powder; and, undoubtedly, the more powerfully wicked men are inflamed with a desire to commit injury, the more do they bruise themselves by their own insolence.

As thorns cut up. 1111     “In the Chaldee כסח (chasach) signifies “to prune,” and in the Syriac it denotes “the pruning of vines,” as in Asseman. Bibl. Orient., tom. 1, p. 374. The meaning therefore is, as thorns lopped off and dried are quickly consumed, with a crackling noise, by the fire laid under them.” — Rosenmuller. This metaphor is not less appropriate; for although they hinder men from touching them by the painful wounds which they inflict on the hands, yet there is no kind of wood that burns more violently or is more quickly consumed. Something of the same kind, we have said, may be observed in “lime,” which at first is hard, but is softened by the fire. The Prophet declares that the same thing will happen to the Babylonians, whom the Lord will easily destroy, though at first they appear to be formidable, and though it may be supposed to be unlikely that they shall be consumed by any conflagration. Whenever, therefore, we behold the enemies of the Church collecting all sorts of wealth and forces, and military preparations, in order to destroy us and set on fire the whole world, let us know that they are kindling a fire which shall miserably destroy them.

We know that this was fulfilled in Sennacherib, for the event proved the truth of these predictions, though they appeared to be altogether incredible. Let us hope that the same thing shall happen to all others who shall imitate the actions of this tyrant, and let us comfort ourselves by that example, and innumerable others, amidst our distresses and afflictions, which shall be followed by certain deliverance and dreadful vengeance on our enemies.


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