Bible Commentary

Isaiah 24:20

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:20

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

The earth … shall be removed like a cottage; rather, sways to and fro like a hammock, Rosenmüller observes, "Alludit ad pensiles lectos, quos, metu ferrarum, in arboribus sibi parare solent, istis in terris, non custodes solum hortorum camporumve, sed et iter facientes."

The transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it; i.e. the earth perishes on account of men's sins. It shall fall, and not rise again. The present earth is to disappear altogether, and to be superseded by "a new heaven and a new earth" ().

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commentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:1-20God's final judgment upon the earth. In striking contrast with man's self-complacent theories of continual progress and improvement in the world, resulting in something like the final perfection of our race, is God's pr…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:1-23SECTION VI. GOD'S GENERAL JUDGMENTS UPON THE EARTH (Isaiah 24-27.). EXPOSITIONJoseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:1-20GOD'S JUDGMENTS ON THE WORLD AT LARGE. From special denunciations of woe upon particular nations—Babylon, Assyria, Philistia, Moab, Syria of Damascus, Egypt and Ethiopia, Arabia, Judea, Tyre—the prophet passes to denunc…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:1-23Prophecy of judgment. The difficulties, historically considered, of this chapter must be left to the exegete. We concern ourselves with the larger sense it contains of a prophecy of a judgment upon the whole world. I. T…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryMatthew Henry on Isaiah 24:16-23Believers may be driven into the uttermost parts of the earth; but they are singing, not sighing. Here is terror to sinners; the prophet laments the miseries he saw breaking in like a torrent; and the small number of be…Matthew HenrycommentaryEncouraging Prospects; Degeneracy Predicted. (b. c. 718.)ENCOURAGING PROSPECTS; DEGENERACY PREDICTED. (B. C. 718.) These verses, as those before, plainly speak, I. Comfort to saints. They may be driven, by the common calamities of the places where they live, into the uttermos…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:16-22Five fruits of transgression. The key-note of this passage is found in the twentieth verse: "The transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it." All these dire evils are the consequences of national transgression. They a…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 24:20The burden of earth's transgressions. "And the transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it." Sin on man is often figured as a burden. Bunyan's picture of Graceless with the load on his back is familiar enough to be und…Joseph S. Exell and contributors