Bible Commentary

Isaiah 1:3

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 1:3

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The ox … the ass. The ox and the ass are probably selected as the least intelligent of domesticated animals (so Jerome, Rosenmüller, and Gesenius). Yet even they recognize their owner or master. Jeremiah contrasts the brutish stupidity of Israel with the wise instinct of animals that have not been domesticated, as the stork, the turtle-dove, the crane, and the swallow ().

Israel doth not know; i.e. does not acknowledge its Master and Owner, pays him no respect, does not recognize him as either Owner or Master. My people. Compare the formula, so frequent in Exodus, "Let my people go" (; , ; , etc.

). Israel was God's people by election (), by covenant (; ), by pardoning grace (). Despite all their backslidings, he had not yet cast them off.

They are still "his people" in Isaiah from first to last, standing in contrast with "the nations, "or "the Gentiles, "among whom they are to be "set as a sign" (). Doth net consider. Gesenius translates, "doth not consider thereof;" Cheyne, "is without understanding."

Bishop Lowth retains the words of the Authorized Version. The meaning would seem to be, "My people doth not consider me, cloth not reflect on my relation to them as Lord and Master."

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