Isaiah 30:29-31 - Joseph Benson’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Bible Comments

Ye shall have a song, &c. You shall have occasion of great joy, and of singing songs of praise for your stupendous deliverance from that formidable enemy; as in the night, &c. He mentions the night, either because the Jewish feasts began in the evening, and were celebrated with great joy during a part of the night, as well as on the following day; or because he has a particular respect to the solemnity of the passover, in which they spent some considerable part of the night in rejoicing, and singing sacred songs before the Lord. As when one goeth, &c. Like the joy of one that is going up to the solemn feasts with music. The Lord shall cause his glorious voice to be heard His thunder, metaphorically taken for a terrible judgment. “This destruction shall be from the immediate hand of God, in which he shall as evidently appear as if he had discomfited the army by a tempest of thunder, and lightning, and hail-stones, as he formerly destroyed the Canaanites and Philistines.” Lowth. And show the lighting down of his arm Upon the Assyrian, whom he will smite with a deadly blow in the face of the world; with the indignation of his anger With great wrath; which is signified by heaping so many words of the same signification together. The Assyrian, who smote with a rod Who was the rod wherewith God smote his people and other nations: he who used to smite others shall now be smitten himself.

Isaiah 30:29-31

29 Ye shall have a song, as in the night when a holy solemnity is kept; and gladness of heart, as when one goeth with a pipe to come into the mountain of the LORD, to the mighty One of Israel.

30 And the LORD shall cause his glorioush voice to be heard, and shall shew the lighting down of his arm, with the indignation of his anger, and with the flame of a devouring fire, with scattering, and tempest, and hailstones.

31 For through the voice of the LORD shall the Assyrian be beaten down, which smote with a rod.