Matthew Henry
The vision which Isaiah saw when he was, as is said of Samuel, established to be a prophet of the Lord
(1Sam 3:20), was intended,
The vision is dated, for the greater certainty of it. It was in the year that king Uzziah died
, who had reigned, for the most part, as prosperously and well as any of the kings of Judah, and reigned very long, above fifty years. About the time that he died, Isaiah saw this vision of God upon a throne; for when the breath of princes goes forth, and they return to their earth, this is our comfort, that the Lord shall reign for ever
, Ps 146:3, Ps 146:4, Ps 146:10. Israel’s king dies, but Israel’s God still lives. From the mortality of great and good men we should take occasion to look up with an eye of faith to the King eternal, immortal. King Uzziah died under a cloud, for he was shut up as a leper till the day of his death. As the lives of princes have their periods, so their glory is often eclipsed; but, as God is everliving, so his glory is everlasting. King Uzziah dies in an hospital, but the King of kings still sits upon his throne.
What the prophet here saw is revealed to us, that we, mixing faith with that revelation, may in it, as in a glass, behold the glory of the Lord; let us turn aside therefore, and see this great sight with humble reverence.
high and lifted up, not only above other thrones, as it transcends them, but over other thrones, as it rules and commands them. Isaiah saw not
Jehovah—the essence of God (no man has seen that, or can see it), but
Adonai—his dominion. He saw the Lord Jesus; so this vision is explained John 12:41; that Isaiah now saw Christ’s glory and spoke of him, which is an incontestable proof of the divinity of our Saviour. He it is who when, after his resurrection, he sat down on the right hand of God, did but sit down where he was before, John 17:5. See the rest of the Eternal Mind: Isaiah
saw the Lord sitting, Ps 29:10. See the sovereignty of the Eternal Monarch: he sits
upon a throne—a throne of glory, before which we must worship,—a throne of government, under which we must be subject,—and a throne of grace, to which we may come boldly. This throne is high, and lifted up above all competition and contradiction.
his train, the skirts of his robes,
filled the temple, the whole world (for it is all God’s temple, and, as the heaven is his throne, so the earth is his footstool), or rather the church, which is filled enriched, and beautified with the tokens of God’s special presence.
Above the throne, as it were hovering about it, or nigh to the throne, bowing before it, with an eye to it,
the seraphim stood, the holy angels, who are called
seraphim-burners; for he
makes his ministers a flaming fire, Ps 104:4. They burn in love to God, and zeal for his glory and against sin, and he makes use of them as instruments of his wrath when he is a consuming fire to his enemies. Whether they were only two or four, or (as I rather think) an
innumerable company of angels, that Isaiah saw, is uncertain; see Dan 7:10. Note, It is the glory of the angels that they are seraphim, have heat proportionable to their light, have abundance, not only of divine knowledge, but of holy love. Special notice is taken of their wings (and of no other part of their appearance), because of the use they made of them, which is designed for instruction to us. They had
each of them six wings, not stretched upwards (as those whom Ezekiel saw, Isa 1:11), but,
the assembly of those saints, Ps 89:7. They not only cover their feet, those members of the body which are less honourable (1Cor 12:23), but even their faces. Though angel’s faces, doubtless, are much fairer than those of the children of men (Acts 6:15), yet in the presence of God, they cover them, because they cannot bear the dazzling lustre of the divine glory, and because, being conscious of an infinite distance from the divine perfection, they are ashamed to show their faces before the holy God, who
charges even his angels with follyif they should offer to vie with him, Job 4:18. If angels be thus reverent in their attendance on God, with what godly fear should we approach his throne! Else we do not the will of God as the angels do it. Yet Moses, when he went into the mount with God, took the veil from off his face. See 2Cor 3:18.
they criedaloud; and with unanimity—
they cried to another, or one with another; they sang alternately, but in concert, and without the least jarring voice to interrupt the harmony.
the Lord of hosts, of their hosts, of all hosts; and one of his most glorious attributes, his holiness, without which his being the Lord of hosts (or, as it is in the parallel place, Rev 4:8;
the Lord God Almighty) could not be so much as it is the matter of our joy and praise; for power, without purity to guide it, would be a terror to mankind. None of all the divine attributes is so celebrated in scripture as this is. God’s power was spoken twice (Ps 62:11), but his holiness thrice,
Holy, holy, holy. This bespeaks,
Who will go for us?) or perhaps to
that which was, and is, and is to come; for that title of God’s honour is added to this song, Rev 4:8. Some make the angels here to applaud the equity of that sentence which God was now about to pronounce upon the Jewish nation. Herein he was, and is, and will be, holy; his ways are equal.
The earth is full of his glory, the glory of his power and purity; for he is holy in all his works, Ps 145:17. The Jews thought the glory of God should be confined to their land; but it is here intimated that in the gospel times (which are pointed to in this chapter) the glory of God should fill all the earth, the glory of his holiness, which is indeed the glory of all his other attributes; this then
filled the temple(Isa 6:1), but, in the latter days, the earth shall be full of it.
shaken; not only the door, but even
the posts of the door, which were firmly fixed,
moved at the voice of him that cried, at the voice of God, who called to judgment (Ps 50:4), at the voice of the angel, who praised him. There are voices in heaven sufficient to drown all the noises of the many waters in this lower world, Ps 93:3, Ps 93:4. This violent concussion of the temple was an indication of God’s wrath and displeasure against the people for their sins; it was an earnest of the destruction of it and the city by the Babylonians first, and afterwards by the Romans; and it was designed to strike an awe upon us. Shall walls and posts tremble before God, and shall we not tremble?
darkened; it was
filled with smoke, which was as a
cloud spreadupon
the face of his throne(Job 26:9); we cannot take a full view of it, nor order our speech concerning it, by reason of darkness. In the temple above there will be no smoke, but everything will be seen clearly. There God dwells in light; here he
makes darkness his pavilion, 2Chr 6:1.