If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the good of
the land. (Isa. 1:19)
Isaiah means the fruits which the earth yields for supplying
the necessaries of life; for in some sense the earth may be said to be unkind
when it does not produce its fruits, and keeps them, as it were, in its bosom.
Yet I have no doubt he alludes to the promises of the law, in which God
declares, that to those who fear him he will bless the earth and will cause it
to produce a great abundance of all good things. “The Lord shall make thee
plenteous in the fruit of the ground, in the land which the Lord sware unto thy
fathers to give thee” (Deut. 28:11).
And yet, when he offers to us the conveniences of the
earthly life, it is not because he wishes that our attention should be confined
to our present happiness, which alone hypocrites value, and which entirely
occupies their minds; but in order that, by the contemplation of it, we may
rise to the heavenly life, and that, by tasting so much goodness, he may
prepare us for the enjoyment of eternal happiness. More especially was God
accustomed to act in this manner towards the ancient people, that, by tasting
present benefits, as by a shadow, they might be called to the heavenly inheritance.
This distinction ought to be carefully observed, that we may
apply this instruction to ourselves, according to the degree of prosperity to
which God has exalted us. The Prophet intended to show that true happiness,
with its accompaniments, consists in obedience to God; and that the wicked, by
their obstinacy, bring upon themselves every kind of calamities, and therefore
that all our distresses ought to be ascribed to the sins and crimes which we
have committed. (Commentaries)
No comments:
Post a Comment