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이사야 49:29의 주석

Rashi on Isaiah

called me from the womb When I was still in the womb, the thought came before Him that my name should be Isaiah (יְשַׁעְיָה) to prophesy salvations (יְשׁוּעוֹת) and consolations.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Unto me, that is unto the prophet.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

From far. That live far away; or things that will happen in remote future.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Hath called me from the birth, I shall explain this in the commentary on Jer. 1:2.1Comp. c. xlviii. Note 10.
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Rashi on Isaiah

And He made my mouth like a sharp sword to castigate the wicked and to prophesy retribution upon them.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

And He hath made my mouth like a sharp sword, to speak elegantly; or, as was the case in his prophecies against Babylon, to speak sharply; and the meaning of the whole phrase is accordingly : Although God has made my mouth like a sharp sword against the Babylonians, neither the Babylonians nor the wicked men in Israel, could do any harm to me,
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Rashi on Isaiah

He concealed me in the shadow of His hand that they be unable to harm me.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

because God hath hid me in the shadow of His hand, which is to the prophet as the sheath to the sword; comp. in His quiver hath he hid me.
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Rashi on Isaiah

into a polished arrow Heb. בָּרוּר, [lit. clear,] polished, kler in O.F.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

ברור Polished, when seen.2I. E. adds נראה seen, in order to show more clearly the similarity between the two figures. The prophet is compared with a sword which is sharp to inflict wounds, but is well protected by its sheath from receiving injury, and with an arrow, which is shining when let loose, but is at other times kept well in its quiver.
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Rashi on Isaiah

in His quiver A receptacle used as a case for arrows, called koujjbre in O.F.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

And said. And God said. ישראל
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Israel.3A. V., O Israel. That is, Thou art an Israelite of whom I am proud; or Thou art Israel, thou art estimated in mine eyes like all Israelites together. I prefer this latter explanation.
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Rashi on Isaiah

And I said, I toiled in vain when I saw that I admonish them and they do not obey.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Then I said. Then I, the prophet, said.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Yet surely my right is with the Lord He knows that it is not from me but from them [i.e., He knows that their failure to obey is not due to my laziness, but to their obstinacy].
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

I said to myself,
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

I have laboured in vain. I have troubled myself in vain to rebuke Israel; they do not hearken.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

My judgment is with God. He will reward me for my trouble. ופעלתי And my wages.4A. V., And my work. Comp. שביר פעלת the wages of one that is hired (Lev. 19:13)
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Rashi on Isaiah

shall be gathered to Him To Him they shall return in repentance.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

That formed me, etc. God formed me, that I should rebuke Israel, till they returned to Him.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

לא Unto him.5A. V., Not. The original reading is לו unto him, as the Masorah recommends; comp. Ps. 100:5; there are some more instances of the same kind. According to the Gaon, the meaning of לא יאסף is: Will not die; he generally explains both the Keri and the Ketib;5aComp. c. ix. Note 2. but what I said, is nevertheless right, and לא of the text is the same as לו, as the Grammarian R. Jehudah explained.6The quiescent letter after Holem (ō) which is also called mater lectionis, is generally ו, but sometimes א, so that לא can sometimes he written for לו. See Two Treatises, etc. ed. John W. Nutt, p. 11 (p. 13 in the Engl. Transl.).
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Rashi on Isaiah

And He said, “It is too light for you to be, etc.” In My eyes, it is too small a gift that you should have this alone, that you be My servant to establish Jacob and to bring back to Me the besieged of Israel, and behold I add more to you, “And I will make you a light for the nations,” to prophesy concerning the downfall of Babylon, which will be a joy for the whole world.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

It is a slight thing, in mine eyes, that thou shouldst be a servant to bring Israel back to their land by thy word.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and the besieged of Israel Heb. וּנְצוּרֵי. Comp. (Prov. 7:10) “With a heart surrounded by evil thoughts (וּנְצֻרַת),” that their heart is surrounded by the inclination of sinful thoughts, like a city besieged by a bulwark of those who besiege it.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

ונצורי And the ruins of.7A. V., The preserved. Besieged.7A. V., The preserved. Besieged. Comp. נצורה desolate (1:8).—
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Not alone wilt thou bring Israel back, but I will give thee for a light of nations.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

להיות ישועתי. That my salvation may be,8A. V., That thou mayest be my salvation. that is, that my salvation maybe published before it comes, unto the end of the earth
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Rashi on Isaiah

about him who is despised of men Heb. לִבְזֹה נֶפֶשׁ, a despised soul, about Israel, who are despised.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Thus saith the Lord, etc. The prophet continues to speak of himself: Thus says the Lord unto me, who am despised of the wicked men. לבזה To him who is despised. בזה is an adjective.
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Rashi on Isaiah

about him whom the nation abhors About him whom the nation abhors, and he is a slave to those who rule over him.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

מתעב It is either a causative verb, meaning: causing to abhor, that is, saying things, for which the nations abhor him; or a transitive verb: abhorring, that is, abhorring all idolaters.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Kings shall see him and rise.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

To a servant of rulers, that is of the nobles of Israel, as they consider themselves, or of the Babylonians. The latter rendering is preferable.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Who is faithful to keep His promise that He promised Abraham concerning the kingdoms, as the matter is stated (Gen. 15:17): “And behold a smoking stove, etc.”
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Kings shall see and arise. I have already alluded to the inference that may be drawn from those words (40:1). Most of the commentators explain this sentence thus: Kings, like Cyrus, will rise and worship, when they hear the words of the prophet.
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Rashi on Isaiah

the Holy One of Israel is He, and He chose you.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Because of the Lord. For He remains faithful to His word.—
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

The suffix ך in ויבחרך and He chose thee,9A. V., And he shall choose thee. shows that this explanation is right.10The use of the pronoun of the second person, proves according to I. E. that the prophet himself is addressed, and that he is personally to receive compensation for the contempt and scorn with which the people received his prophecies. See I. E. on 40:1.
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Rashi on Isaiah

In a time of favor In the time of prayer, when you seek My favor and appease Me.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

בעת רצון עניתיך In an acceptable time I have heard thee. This expression is likewise a proof of the correctness of my opinion.11See preceding note. The meaning of the phrase according to I. E. is: In the time of favour, viz., for the Israelites, when their redemption was prepared, I have also heard thee, the prophet, and decreed to cause thee to be honoured by all. Many, in opposition to the context, refer the pronoun thee to Cyrus. R. Moses thinks that the preposition ב in בעת רצון has the same meaning as in במרחב יה (Ps. 118:5), namely: with. It is not at all unlikely that his opinion is right.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and on a day of salvation When you need salvation.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and I will watch you Heb. וְאֶצָּרְךָ, and I will watch you.
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Rashi on Isaiah

for a people of a covenant to be a people of a covenant to Me.
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Rashi on Isaiah

to establish a land The land of Israel, chosen by Me from all lands.
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Rashi on Isaiah

To say to the prisoners, “Go out!” At the time I will say to the prisoners of the exile, “Go out!”
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

That thou mayest say, etc. This shows that the prophet announced this to the Jews before they returned from the Babylonian exile.
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Rashi on Isaiah

rivers Jonathan renders: נַגְדִּין, streams of water.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

And their pastures in all high places. And they shall find their pastures, etc.
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Rashi on Isaiah

heat Heb. שָׁרָב, heat.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

They will not, etc. When they return to Zion.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

שרב Heat. Comp. 35:7. Nor the sun smite them. Comp. The sun shall not smite thee by day (Ps. 121:6)
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Rashi on Isaiah

And I will make all My mountains into a road In contrast to what he said concerning the days of its ruin (supra 33:8) “The wayfarer has stopped,” now the wayfarers shall return and go therein.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

And I will make all my mountains a way, etc. The mountains will be lowered, and the paths which are low will be exalted.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and My highways shall be raised In contrast to what he said (ibid.): “Highways have become desolate,” deteriorated with no one to repair them, now My highways shall be raised, they shall repair the deterioration of the roads and raise them as is customary, with smooth pebbles and earth.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

As to the use of the masculine plural ירומון, together with the feminine מסלות, comp. תמצאו ye (daughters of Jerusalem) find (Song 5:8). The origin of the seeming irregularity is to be found in the indifference of the Hebrews as to the use of the plural masculine for the feminine, so long as the idea of plurality is clearly expressed.12According to this remark, the distinction between the masculine and feminine is in the plural often neglected; Comp. the third person plural past, and the second person plural past with a pronominal suffix. Others explain the verse thus: Those that will return, will be so numerous, that they will have to walk high on the mountains.13That is, the roads between the mountains will not be wide enough for all the people that will return; part of the people will therefore be compelled to walk on the mountains on both sides of the road. According to their opinion ירמון means: they—that will return—will be high, as if the prophet said: they will walk high on my paths (ועל מסלתי)
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Rashi on Isaiah

from the land of Sinim [Jonathan renders:] from the southland.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

From far, from the east.14The phrase From far, is explained to refer to The east, because north and west are directly mentioned, and Sinim is supposed by I. E. to be in the south. Where three sides are mentioned, it may be expected, that the fourth will likewise be found.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

From the north, from Babylon.14aBabylon is here described to be in the north; but in his remark on 43:5, I. E. says, that it is in the east. It was perhaps north-east of Palestine. See c. xliii. Note 2a.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

From the west. From Assyria. Comp. Ezr. 6:22.15See I. E. on 43:5, and Notes 3 and 4.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

מארץ סינים From the land of Sinim. A land near Egypt. The name סינים is perhaps connected with סנה bush.16This remark seems to be intended as a hint where to place the land of Sinim, indicating that Mount Horeb is a part of it; because simply to say, that סינים means perhaps bushes would be quite superfluous, and moreover, I. E. would in that case rather have said והוא מגזרת סנה it is derived from סנה ‘bush,’ than הסנה מזאת הגזרה, the word סנה is of the same root.
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Rashi on Isaiah

for the Lord has consoled His people.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Sing, etc. This is a figurative expression; or17According to the second explanation the expression must also be figurative; the difference between the two explanations is, that according to the former the nouns heaven, earth, mountains, are used here in a figurative sense, signifying all classes of people; according to the latter the verb sing has a figurative meaning. the purity of the air is to be considered as the singing of the heavens, the productiveness of the fields and gardens as the singing of the earth, and the singing of the mountains can be explained in a similar way.
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Rashi on Isaiah

And Zion said She thought that I had forgotten her.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

But Zion said before the redemption,18The Hebrew text has קודם הגולה but it may be inferred from the context, that I. E. meant here קודם הגאולה before the redemption. that the Lord forgot her. Zion. The congregation of Israel.18aBy this remark I. E. probably intends to say that Zion here is not the representative of the kingdom of Judah alone, but of all the tribes of Israel, so that this prediction might as well refer to the redemption from the Babylonian exile as to the period of Messiah. See I. E. on 40:1.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Shall a woman forget her sucking child Heb. עוּלָהּ, similar to עוֹלֵל.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Can a woman, etc. This is mentioned, because God has given to woman a natural disposition to have pity on her children.
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Rashi on Isaiah

from having mercy on the child of her womb Heb. מֵרֶחֶם בֶּן-בִּטְנָהּ.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

עולל═עול Sucking child. Comp. Jer. 6:11; Is. 65:20.
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Rashi on Isaiah

These too shall forget Even if these forget, I will not forget you.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

That she should not have compassion, etc. Repetition of the same idea.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

גם אלח תשכחנה Yea, they may forget. There are cruel women, that forget their children or themselves;19This is the translation according to the Hebrew text או עצמן; the question, however, is not whether they forget themselves, but whether they forget their children. It is possible that עצמן is a corruption of עולליהן their sucking children. or there are women that forget these,19aAccording to the first explanation the pronoun אלה these is the subject of the sentence, and refers to the women; according to the second to the sucking child and the son of her womb.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

yet will I not forget thee. Her sucking child is mentioned, because the mother has usually more compassion for the little one that has no strength.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Behold on [My] hands Heb. עַל-כַּפַּיִם [lit. on hands]. I see you as though you are engraved on My hands, to see you and always to remember you. Another explanation is: עַל-כַּפַּיִם “from upon the clouds of glory.” Comp. (Job 36:32) “On the clouds (כַּפַּיִם) He covered the rain.”
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands. According to the Gaon, the clouds are meant by the palms of my hand;20Comp. Rashi ad locum (second explanation), and I. E. on Job 36:34. but I say it is an anthropomorphism, meaning: I shall see thee continually; the second part of the verse, the parallelism of which divides it into two similar halves, confirms the correctness of this explanation.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Your sons have hastened to return.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Thy children, etc. Thy children have come, and all thy destroyers shall go away from thee.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

All of them. All of thy children.21According to I. E. the pronoun them (–ׇ ם in כֻּלׇּם) refers to thy children of the preceding verse, though separated from it by the sentence thy destroyers and they that made thee waste shall go forth of thee. R. Moses Hakkohen explains the expression thus: Thy children as well as thy destroyers, that is, the wicked, gathered themselves, etc. According to this explanation the future יֵצֵאוּ is used instead of the past יׇצׇאוּ.22The sense of ver. 17 and ver. 18 accordingly is: Thy children make haste, even thy destroyers, etc., that had gone away from thee, all of them now come back unto thee, etc. But it is not necessary to assume this irregularity here.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

As I live. The decree shall not be annulled; as truly as I am living, it will be acted upon.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

כקשורי כלה ═ ככלה As the ornament of the bride round her neck.23A. V., As a bride doeth. I. E. supplies the noun קשורי ornament, from the preceding verb ותקשרים and bind them. He repeatedly mentions the rule, that every verb implies a verbal noun: so here the noun קשורים is contained in the verb; to this rule another must be added, which is here made use of, namely the rule of ellipsis: מושך עצמו ואחר עמו. A word, mentioned in one sentence, or in one part of the sentence, is sometimes meant for the next likewise.
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Rashi on Isaiah

you shall be crowded by the inhabitants You shall be crowded by the multitude of inhabitants that shall come into your midst. The place shall be too narrow for them to build houses for themselves.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

תחת חרבותיך ═ חרבותיך Instead of Thy waste places.24A. V., Thy waste places. I. E. supplies the preposition תחת instead of, because the second person fem. תצרי does not agree with the plural חרבותיך ,שממתיך. Comp. פשעי for my transgressions (Mic. 6:7); פרים instead of calves (Hos. 14:31.) The verse can also be explained thus: They were thy waste places before, but now,
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Thou shalt be too narrow by reason of the inhabitants, by reason of the multitude of inhabitants, all of whom are thy children; because they that swallowed them up, will be far away.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Your children of whom you were bereaved [lit. the children of your bereavements.] The children of whom you were bereaved.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

גשה לי Give place unto me. Lit. Go thither for my sake. Comp. גש הלאה stand back (Gen. 19:9)
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Rashi on Isaiah

move over for me [lit. approach for me.] Draw closer to another side for me, and I will dwell.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and solitary solede in O.F.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

נלמודה Desolate. Remaining lonely; comp. גלמוד solitary (Job 3:7). It is an adjective, of a quadriliteral root.
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Rashi on Isaiah

rejected Rejected by everyone. All say about me, “Turn away from her.”
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

וסורה And removing to and fro. It is an adjective, and not a participle passive;25Comp. Rashi ad locum. for סור to depart is a neuter verb.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

איפה where. It is a compound of two words אי and פה
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Rashi on Isaiah

My hand...My standard A signal to bring the exiles.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Behold, I will lift up My hand, etc. As a man lifts up his hand, that he may be seen. This phrase as well as that which follows: And set up my standard, are the same as I shall make known this my salvation.
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Rashi on Isaiah

a standard Perka in O.F., [perche in modern French,] a pole. Comp. (supra 30:17) “And like a flagpole (וְכַנֵּס) on a hill.” It is a signal for gathering, and they place a cloth [a flag] on the end of it.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

And they shall bring thy sons. By they the Non-Israelites are to be understood.
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Rashi on Isaiah

in their armpits Ajjsela [aisela] in O.F., [aisselle in modern French]. Comp. Ezra (Neh. 5:13): “Also I shook out my armpit (חָצְנִי).”
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

בחוצן In their lap.26A. V., In their arms. Comp. חצני my lap (Neh. 5:13)
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

אומניך Thy nursing fathers. Comp. ויהי אמן and he brought up (Est. 2:7). It is a figurative expression for the great honour which will be shown to Israel.
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Rashi on Isaiah

Shall prey be taken from a mighty warrior You think that it is impossible to take from Esau those captured from Jacob the righteous one.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Shall the prey, etc. These words are put into the mouth of Israel by the prophet. How is it possible, the people ask, that Israel should be delivered from the power of the heathen nations ?
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

המלקח The prey, which he has taken, that is, the captives.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

ואם שבי צדיק ימלט Or shall the righteous27A. V., Lawful. captive be delivered, because of his righteousness, after having been taken by the mighty.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and with your contender Heb. יְרִיבֵךְ. And with your contender I will contend.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

The captive of the mighty. The captive which the mighty man has taken, will be taken away from him.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

עריץ The terrible. It is an adjective with transitive meaning: causing terror; comp. אימים (Gen. 14:5).
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

Moreover, I will contend with him that contendeth with thee. I shall make war against those that attack thee. יריבך that contendeth with thee. Some derive it from ירב; others by metathesis from ריב;28There is in fact no difference between the two views, whether we assume a new root ירב which has the same meaning as ריב, or say that it is the same root, the י having changed its place; in both cases יריב is a noun, meaning he that contendeth. according to the Jerusalemite29See I. E. on 28:12, and note 13. the relative אשר who must be supplied before יריבך, which he explains to be the third person singular masculine future of ריב; he overlooked, however, the parallel instance of יריבי that strive with me (Ps. 35:1).30This form cannot be explained to be the future, since in that case it would be יְרִיבֵנִי he that contends with me, or יְרִיבוּנִי they that contend with me. In short it is an irregular form.
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Rashi on Isaiah

And those who taunt you I will feed their flesh to the beasts of the field. The word מוֹנַיִךְ is an expression akin to (Lev. 25:14) “You shall not taunt (אַל תּוֹנוּ).” This denotes taunting with words, those who anger you with their revilings.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

מוניך That oppress thee. Comp. ולא תגו ye shall not oppress (Lev. 25:17). Others say that it means: thy numberers, comparing it with מונה that telleth (Jer. 33:13), because Israel is compared to a flock of sheep.31It is true that Israel is often compared by the prophets and poets to a flock of sheep; but in this chapter this is not the case, and the verb מוניך, if taken in this figurative sense, would here be too isolated, and out of place.
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Rashi on Isaiah

and as with sweet wine Heb. וְכֶעָסִיס. The sweetness of wine.
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Ibn Ezra on Isaiah

מדמם = דמם With their own blood. An ellipsis is as frequently found in poetry.
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Rashi on Isaiah

they shall become drunk [from] their blood So shall those accustomed to drink blood become drunk from their blood. Now who are they? These are the fowl of the heavens. So did Jonathan render this.
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