Isaiah 26:19 - John Trapp Complete Commentary

Bible Comments

Thy dead [men] shall live, [together with] my dead body shall they arise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust: for thy dew [is as] the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead.

Ver. 19. Thy dead men shall rise.] So shall not thine enemies. Isa 26:14 This may seem to be Christ's gracious answer to his poor desponding people; and it is, say some, argumentum a beata resurrectione sumptum, an argument taken from the happy resurrection of the righteous; the wicked also shall be raised at the last day, but not by the like means, nor for the like blessed purpose. Dan 12:2 Some read the words thus: "Thy dead, my dead body shall live"; for the faithful, say they, are Christ's body; Eph 4:12 and therefore, to shew this, "my dead body" is here added by apposition, to show how the faithful, being dead and buried, are to be accounted of, even Christ's dead body, &c., and shall be raised at the last day by virtue of that mystical ration which still they hold with Christ. Hence they are said to "sleep in Jesus," to be "dead in Christ," who shall "change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself." Php 3:21 The Hebrews call a dead corpse Nephesh, i.e., a soul, Numbers 5:2 ; Numbers 9:10 ; Num 19:11 Hag 2:14 to note that it shall live again, and that the soul shall return to it. At this day also they call the churchyard Bethcaiim, the "house of the living"; and as they return from the burial place, every one plucks off grass from off the ground twice or thrice, and casts it over his head, saying, florebunt de civitate tanquam faenum terrae, &c. Psa 92:12-13 so to set forth their hopes of a resurrection, a Neither need it seem "incredible" with any "that God should raise the dead" Act 26:8 considering what followeth: (1.) "Together with my dead body shall they arise," i.e., with Christ's body raised as the "first fruits of them that sleep." 1Co 15:20 One of the Rabbis readeth it, As my dead body, they shall arise. (2.) The force of Christ's all-powerful voice, saying, "Awake and sing ye that dwell in dust": arise and come away, lift up your heads, for your redemption is at hand. The resurrection is in the Syriac called the "consolation." Joh 11:24 (3.) "Thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead," i.e., Qua facilitate herbulas reficit Deus, eadem mortuos animare potest. God can as easily raise the dead as refresh the herbs of the earth with a reviving dew, when they were even scorched to death with the heat of the sun. See we not a yearly resurrection of grass, grain, flowers, fruits, every spring tide. And surely if nature can produce out of a small seed a great tree, or a butterfly out of a worm, or the beautiful feathered peacock out of a misshapen egg, cannot the Almighty raise our bodies out of dust, who first out of dust made them? Or can the condition of any people or person be so desperate that he is not able to help them out. The assurance of God's power, which shall show itself in the raising of the dead, is a most excellent argument to confirm us in the certainty of God's promises, seem they never so incredible to flesh and blood. Atque haec de Cantico.

a Leo Modena, Hist. of Rites of the Jews, p. 238.

Isaiah 26:19

19 Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust: for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead.