Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Isaiah 1:30 - 1:30

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Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Isaiah 1:30 - 1:30


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He still continues in the same excitement, piling a second explanatory sentence upon the first, and commencing this also with “for” (Chi); and then, carried away by the association of ideas, he takes terebinths and gardens as the future figures of the idolatrous people themselves. “For ye shall become like a terebinth with withered leaves, and like a garden that hath no water.” Their prosperity is distroyed, so that they resemble a terebinth withered as to its leaves, which in other cases are always green (nobleth ‛aleah, genitives connection according to (Ges. §112, 2). Their sources of help are dried up, so that they are like a garden without water, and therefore waste. In this withered state terebinths and gardens, to which the idolatrous are compared, are easily set on fire. All that is wanted is a spark to kindle them, when they are immediately in flames.