Isaiah 5:1 Now will I sing to my wellbeloved a song of my beloved touching his vineyard. My wellbeloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill: Israel God’s vineyard; his mercies, and their unfruitfulness; should be laid waste,
Isaiah 5:1-7. Judgments upon covetousness,
Isaiah 5:8-10; upon drunkards, and the lascivious,
Isaiah 5:11 ,12. The great misery of the Jews,
Isaiah 5:13-17. Judgments on impiety, scoffers at God’s threatenings, those who corrupt the notions of good and ill, strong drinkers, and unjust judges,
Isaiah 5:18-23. God’s anger and the Chaldeans’ army against them,
Isaiah 5:24-30.
Now will I sing;
I will record it, to be a witness for God, and against you, as Moses did his song,
Deu 31:19 32:1.
To my Well-beloved;
to the Lord of the vineyard, as appears by the last clause of the verse; to God or Christ, whom I love and serve, and for whose glory, eclipsed by you, I am greatly concerned.
A song of my Beloved;
not devised by me, not the effect of my envy or passion; but inspired by God, which therefore it behoveth you to lay to heart.
His vineyard;
his church, oft and very fitly called a
vineyard, because of God’s singular respect to it, and care of it, and his delight in it, and expectation of good fruit from it, &c.
In a very fruitful hill;
hills being places most commodious for vines: see
Psalm 80:10. Heb.
in a horn
(which may signify either,
1. The figure or shape of the land of Canaan, which resembles a horn; or,
2. The height and hilliness of that land, as horns are the highest parts of beasts; or,
3. The goodliness and excellency of it,
as a horn, when it is ascribed to a man, signifies his glory and dignity, as
Job 16:1 ,5 Psa 89:17,24, &c.)
the son of oil, which, by a vulgar Hebraism, notes an oily or a fat soil.