Isaiah 65:13 - Exposition
Therefore thus saith the Lord God ; rather, thus saith the Lord Jehovah (comp. Isaiah 7:7 ; Isaiah 25:8 ; Isaiah 28:16 ; Isaiah 30:15 ; Isaiah 40:10 ; Isaiah 48:16 ; Isaiah 49:22 ; I. 4, 5, 7, 9; Isaiah 52:4 ; Isaiah 56:8 ; Isaiah 61:1 , etc.). My servants shall eat, but ye shall be hungry , etc. This entire series of contrasts may be understood in two ways; literally, of the two classes of exiles, the religious and the irreligious; metaphorically, of God's servants and his adversaries at all times and in all places. The religious exiles would return to the land of promise as soon as permitted, and would there prosper in a worldly sense—have abundance to eat and drink, rejoice, and sing for joy ( Ezra 3:11-13 ). The irreligious, remaining in Babylonia, would suffer hunger and thirst, endure shame, cry and howl for sorrow and vexation of spirit. This would be one fulfilment of the prophecy; but there would also be another. God's servants at all times and in all places would be sustained with spiritual food, and "rejoice and sing for joy of heart." His adversaries would everywhere feel a craving for the "meat" and "drink," which alone satisfy the soul, and would be oppressed with care, and with a sense of shame, and suffer anguish of spirit.
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