The great commentary of Saint Thomas Aquinas on Isaiah is now online. We are going to take advantage of this during Advent and take a look at what the Angelic Doctor has to say about Isaiah 7: 11-14 where the great prophet predicts the coming of Christ. Go here to read the first part. Go here to read the second part. Here is the third part:
255. Third, the adaptation of the sign is set out: for before the child know, that is, before he assumed created knowledge in being born; the land, of Samaria and Syria (2 Kgs 16:9, 17:3–5).
256. The Lord shall bring upon you. Here he sets out the threat against those who do not believe the sign.
And first, he shows the gravity of the punishment:
Second, the order of punishment: and it shall come to pass in that day (Isa 7:18);
Third, the effect of the punishment: and it shall come to pass in that day, that a man shall nourish a young cow (Isa 7:21).
And he shows the gravity of the punishment from the authority of the one who commands: the Lord, who is powerful, shall bring: the Lord Almighty is his name (Exod 15:3); from the universality of the punishment: upon you, through Theglathphalasar, and upon your people, and upon the house of your father, as to your descendants, through his sons that are tyrants; from comparison with what preceded it: days, so evil, and the days are called evil because of their fault: sufficient for the day is the evil thereof (Matt 6:34); redeeming the time, because the days are evil (Eph 5:16); and because of the punishment: that have not come since the time of the separation of Ephraim from Judah (1 Kgs 12); the gravity of the punishment is shown further from of the power of those who execute it: with the king of the Assyrians, Nabuchodonosor, because the kingdoms of the Chaldeans and the Assyrians were one under him, and had been one from the beginning; for the Assyrians had come forth from the Chaldeans (Gen 10): I will take Nabuchodonosor the king of Babylon my servant (Jer 25:9).
257. And it shall come to pass. Here he sets out the manner and order of punishment; and he sets out three things.
First, the calling together of their enemies: shall whistle, that is, blow upon, for the fly, that is, for the king of Egypt, who killed Josias (2 Kgs 23:29); and he is compared to a fly because of the uncleanness of idolatry and lust which thrives in Egypt; in the uttermost parts of the rivers, because they come even from the farthest parts of Egypt, and for the bee, namely, for the Chaldeans and the Assyrians, because from the former they had the honey of defense, and from the latter the sting of persecution, above: he will whistle to them from the ends of the earth (Isa 5:26).
258. Second, the multitude of their enemies: and they shall come, and shall all of them rest in the torrents of the valleys, for the benefit of water, which usually runs in valleys, and in the holes of the rocks, for fortification, and upon all places set with shrubs, for wood, and in all hollow places, for locations of homes, below: and the stretching out of his wings shall fill the breadth of your land (Isa 8:8).
259. Third, their captivity: in that day the Lord shall shave with a sharp razor, that is, through the king, by them, that is, through them, namely, the Assyrians; concerning a sharp razor, see Ezekiel 5:1: take you a sharp knife that shaves the hair: and cause it to pass over your head. The head, the king, the feet, craftsmen, the beard, soldiers who are for the adornment of the king (2 Kgs 25), above: every man of war, judge, and prophet (Isa 3:2). Or this is said against the Egyptians, who were their helpers: by them, that is, the Egyptians, that is hired. And he shall rifle the spoils thereof: and it shall be wages for his army. And for the service that he has done me against it (Ezek 29:19–20).
And we will conclude next Sunday.