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All they shall answer and tell you, Are you also become weak as we? are you become like us?
Verse Takeaways
1
Death, the Great Equalizer
Commentators unanimously highlight how this verse portrays death as the ultimate leveler. The once-mighty king of Babylon, who may have seen himself as invincible, is reduced to the same weak state as all the other dead. As John Calvin notes, tyrants are often blinded by their greatness, but death reveals they share the same mortal condition as everyone else, stripping away all earthly power and pride.
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Book Overview
Isaiah
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7
18th Century
Presbyterian
All they shall speak ... - Language of astonishment that one so proud, and who apparently never expected to die, should be brought …
19th Century
Anglican
Art thou also become weak as we? —The question implies, of course, an affirmative answer. The king of Babylon, the report…
Baptist
It is a fine pictorial representation of the spirits of departed kings lifting themselves up from their beds of dust, and saying, "Are you, king of…
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16th Century
Protestant
All shall speak and say to thee. These are taunts with which the dead jeer the tyrant who has joined them, as if they asked him why he too…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
All they shall speak, and say to you So they would say, could they speak, and are here represented as if they did:
The whole plan of Divine Providence is arranged with a view to the good of the people of God. A settlement in the land of promise is of God's mercy…
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13th Century
Catholic
409. Her time is near at hand. In this part, he promises liberation to the Jews through the destruction of Babylon, which he threatened abov…