Matthew Henry
We have here the commission and instructions given, not to this prophet only, but, with him, to all the Lord’s prophets, nay, and to all Christ’s ministers, to proclaim comfort to God’s people.
Lord God of the holy prophets, Rev 22:6) to comfort the people of God; and the charge is doubled,
Comfort you, comfort you—not because the prophets are unwilling to do it (no, it is the most pleasant part of their work), but because sometimes the souls of God’s people refuse to be comforted, and their comforters must repeat things again and again, ere they can fasten any thing upon them. Observe here,
Speak to the heart of Jerusalem(Isa 40:2); speak that which will revive her heart, and be a cordial to her and to all that belong to her and wish her well. Do not whisper it, but
cry unto her: cry aloud, to show saints their comforts as well as to show sinners their transgressions; make her hear it:”
Her warfare is accomplished, the set time of her servitude; the campaign is now at an end, and she shall retire into quarters of refreshment.” Human life is a warfare (Job 7:1); the Christian life much more. But the struggle will not last always; the warfare will be accomplished, and then the good soldiers shall not only enter into rest, but be sure of their pay.
her iniquity is pardoned, God is reconciled to her, and she shall no longer be treated as one guilty before him.” Nothing can be spoken more comfortably than this,
Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee. Troubles are
thenremoved in love when sin is pardoned.
She has received of the Lord double forthe cure of
all her sins, sufficient, and more than sufficient, to separate between her and her idols,” the worship of which was the great sin for which God had a controversy with them, and from which he designed to reclaim them by their captivity in Babylon: and it had that effect upon them; it begat in them a rooted antipathy to idolatry, and was physic doubly strong for the purging out of that iniquity. Or it may be taken as the language of the divine compassion:
His soul was grieved for the misery of Israel(Judg 10:16), and, like a tender father,
since he spoke against them he earnestly remembered them(Jer 31:20), and was ready to say that he had given them too much correction. They, being very penitent, acknowledged that God has
punished them less than their iniquities deserved; but he, being very pitiful, owned, in a manner, that he had punished them more than they deserved. True penitents have indeed, in Christ and his sufferings,
received of the Lord’s hand double for all their sins; for the satisfaction Christ made by his death was of such an infinite value that it was more than double to the demerits of sin;
for God spared not his own Son.