There being no trouble all around that threatened them,
Isaiah gives warning that the calamity will come from a distance. Though
everything appears to be calm and peaceful, and though we are not at variance
with our neighbors, God can bring enemies from the end of heaven. There is no
reason, therefore, why we should promise to ourselves a lasting and prosperous
condition, though we are not threatened with any immediate danger.
If this prediction had reached the inhabitants of Babylon,
they would undoubtedly have laughed at it as a fable. Even if we should suppose
that they paid some respect to the Prophet, yet, having so strong a conviction
of their safety, they would have despised those threatenings as idle and
groundless.
An example may be easily found. When we preach at the
present day about the Turk, all think that it is a fable, because they think
that he is still at a great distance from us. But we see how quickly he
overtook those who were at a greater distance and more powerful. So great is
the insensibility of men that they cannot be aroused, unless they are chastised
and made to feel the blows.
Let the inhabitants of Babylon, therefore, be a warning to
us, to dread, before it is too late, the threatenings which the prophets utter,
that the same thing may not happen to us as happens to those wicked men, who,
relying on their prosperous condition, are so terrified when the hand of God
attacks and strikes them, that they can no longer stand, but sink down
bewildered. (Commentaries)
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