Isaiah 15
Haydock CIsaiah 15:1
Moab. Which would be visited in three years’ time (chap. xvi. 14.) either by Ezechias, or by Sennacherib, though history be silent on this head. The Moabites had been very cruel, Amos i. and ii. — Night. Suddenly. (Calmet) — Their misery was so much the greater. (Worthington) — Ar. The capital. (Calmet)
Isaiah 15:2
House. Protestants, “he is come up to Baith,” (Haydock) or the royal family is gone to the temple of their idol, Chamos, to lament. (St. Jerome) (Menochius) (Calmet) — Shaven. As in mourning, Jeremias xlviii. 37.
Isaiah 15:4
Itself. Every one shall deplore his own distress.
Isaiah 15:5
My. A charitable heart will grieve for the misfortune of an enemy. (Worthington) — I shall join in the general lamentations, though Moab has always been so great an enemy of Israel. (Calmet) — Septuagint, “the heart of Moab cries in itself to Segor.” (Haydock) — We will retire thither. (Chaldean) — Bars. Princes. Protestants, “his fugitives shall, " &c. — Heifer. Strong and ungovernable. Hebrew, “to Heglath and to Shelishia for,” &c., though we may as well adhere to the Vulgate, Septuagint, &c.
Isaiah 15:6
Nemrim. Or Nemra, (Numbers xxxii. 3.) to the north of Segor. (Calmet) — The country around hence became barren. (St. Jerome)
Isaiah 15:7
Willows. That is, as some say, the waters of Babylon; others render it a valley of the Arabians, (Challoner) or “of crows,” to which their bodies will be exposed, chap. lvii. 6.
Isaiah 15:8
Cry. Of iniquity, or rather of grief.
Isaiah 15:9
Dibon. Septuagint, &c., read, “Dimon,” which signifies, “blood.” I will give it a better claim to this appellation. — Lion. Nabuchodonosor. (Calmet) — Septuagint, “I will bring the Arabs up on Dimon, and will take away the seed of Moab, and Ariel, and the remnant of Adama.” (Haydock)
Isaiah 15:32
CHAPTER XV.
