Bible Commentary

Isaiah 19:3

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:3

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

They shall seek to the idols. The Egyptians believed that their gods gave them oracles. Menephthah claims to have been warned by Phthah, the god of Memphis, not to take the field in person against the Libyans when they invaded the Delta, but to leave the task of contending with them to his generals.

Herodotus speaks of there being several well-known oracular shrines in Egypt, the most trustworthy being that of Maut, at the city which he calls Buto. The charmers … them that have familiar spirits … wizards.

Classes of men corresponding to the "magicians" and "wise men" of earlier times (). (On the large place which magic occupied in the thoughts of the Egyptians, see 'Pulpit Commentary' on .

) There was no diminution of the confidence reposed in them as time went on; and some remains of their practices seem to survive to the present day.

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Isaiah 19:1-17God shall come into Egypt with his judgments. He will raise up the causes of their destruction from among themselves. When ungodly men escape danger, they are apt to think themselves secure; but evil pursues sinners, an…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Doom of Egypt. (b. c. 710.)THE DOOM OF EGYPT. (B. C. 710.) Though the land of Egypt had of old been a house of bondage to the people of God, where they had been ruled with rigour, yet among the unbelieving Jews there still remained much of the hu…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:1-4Coming judgment upon Egypt. The historical allusions in this passage cannot be positively cleared up. So far as the discovery of inscriptions in recent years enables us to lift a little the veil which hangs over the lan…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:1-17THE BURDEN OF EGYPT. It has been doubted whether this prophecy refers to the conquest of Egypt by Piankhi, as related in the monument which he set up at Napata, or to that by Esarhaddon, of which we gain our knowledge f…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:1-17Egypt's punishment, a proof both of God's song-suffering and of His inexorable justice. The punishment of Egypt by the Assyrian conquest, on which the prophet enlarges in this chapter, may be regarded in a double light.…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:1-25EXPOSITIONJoseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:2-10A picture of penalty. The threatened penalty of Egypt as painted by the prophet here will, on examination, be found to be essentially the penalty with which God causes sin to be visited always and everywhere. I. STRIFE,…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 19:3Temptation to trust in diviners. "They shall seek … to the charmers." "A time of panic, when the counsels of ordinary statesmen failed, was sure in Egypt, as at Athens in its times of peril, to be fruitful in oracles an…Joseph S. Exell and contributors