a14:3-23
bRev 18
c14:3
d28:12
eDeut 25:19
f2 Sam 7:11
gIsa 9:4
h14:4
i14:7-8
j42:11
k44:23
lRom 8:22
m14:9
n14:10
o14:11
pRev 18:22
qIsa 66:24
r14:12
sEzek 28
tLuke 10:18
uRev 12:9
v14:13
wPs 48:2
xMatt 11:23
yLuke 10:15
z14:14
aaGen 14:19-22
ab14:15-17
ac14:9-11
ad14:18-20
ae14:21
afDeut 5:9-10

‏ Isaiah 14:3-21

Summary for Isa 14:3-23: 14:3-23  a This taunting song for the king of Babylon is in the form of a funeral dirge (cp. Rev 18  b). 14:3  c God gives ... rest (i.e., relief; 28:12  d; see Deut 25:19  e; 2 Sam 7:11  f) from the sorrow and fear, ... slavery and chains Israel experienced under foreign oppressors (see Isa 9:4  g).
14:4  h A taunt is a mocking comparison in song form. In this instance, the king of Babylon is compared to a dead man entering the world of the dead.
Summary for Isa 14:7-8: 14:7-8  i The land and people will be at rest and quiet because the oppression has ended and the king of Babylon has died.

• The whole creation will join in praise, able to sing again (see also 42:11  j; 44:23  k; cp. Rom 8:22  l).
14:9  m The Babylonians saw the place of the dead (Hebrew Sheol) as a place of no return.

• stand up (literally get up from their thrones): The thrones reflect the Babylonian concept of the life hereafter as a continuation of the same mode of existence as the present life. It appears that the other kings are honoring the great king of Babylon, but the next verses tell a different story.
14:10  n weak as we are: The Babylonian king had no power over anyone after death and was unable to leave Sheol. The Israelites will mock this great king who on earth appeared to have no weaknesses.
14:11  o Babylon’s might and power and the sound of the harp were ended, and its magnificence was destroyed (see also Rev 18:22  p).

• Maggots and worms symbolized death and decomposition (Isa 66:24  q).
14:12  r fallen from heaven, O shining star: These words allude to the Canaanite story of the god Helel’s rebellion against the god El (chief deity of the Canaanite pantheon) and his fall from heaven. Some see the fall of the king of Babylon here as symbolizing the fall of Satan (see Ezek 28  s; Luke 10:18  t; Rev 12:9  u). However, there is little to suggest that Isaiah understood it in that way. He was thinking of the historical king of Babylon.

• son of the morning: The battle took place under the early morning sun. The Latin Vulgate translates the term as Lucifer (morning star), a name for Satan in Christian tradition, but the Hebrew text makes no apparent reference here to Satan.
14:13  v This verse alludes to the Canaanite belief that the chief god El and the other gods were enthroned on Mount Zaphon, a northern mountain (see Ps 48:2  w; for a New Testament application, see Matt 11:23  x; Luke 10:15  y).
14:14  z Most High: See Gen 14:19-22  aa.
Summary for Isa 14:15-17: 14:15-17  ab This is a restatement of 14:9-11  ac. The dead spirits inhabiting the place of the dead will be startled and amazed that the Babylonian king, who ruled the world with his merciless might, has absolutely no power in death.
Summary for Isa 14:18-20: 14:18-20  ad The absence of a proper burial was a sign of great shame and dishonor. Unlike other kings, the king of Babylon would be disgraced in judgment.
14:21  ae As another sign of disgrace, the king of Babylon would have no children to provide a future legacy.

• because of their father’s sins: God looks at individuals in relationship to their families and their people. Here, the Babylonian king’s children had joint responsibility for their father’s actions (see also Deut 5:9-10  af).
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