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Isaiah 14:12 - Exposition

How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer! Babylon's sudden fall is compared, with great force and beauty, to the (seeming) fall of a star from heaven. The word translated "Lucifer" means properly "shining one," and no doubt here designates a star; but whether any particular star or no is uncertain. The LXX . translated by ἑωσφόρος , whence our "Lucifer." The subjoined epithet, "son of the morning" or "of the dawn," accords well with this rendering. How art thou cut down to the ground! One of Isaiah's favorite changes of metaphor. It is a favorite metaphor also to which he reverts—that of representing the destruction of a nation by the felling of a tree or of a forest (comp. Isaiah 2:12 , Isaiah 2:13 ; Isaiah 10:33 , Isaiah 10:34 , etc.). Which didst weaken the nations ; rather, which didst prostrate the nations . The word used is one of great force (comp. Exodus 17:13 ; Job 14:10 ).

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