Even unto them will I give in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off.
5. a place ] a monument; lit., “a hand.” There seems no reason to doubt that the promise is to be understood literally. An illustration of what is meant is found in 2Sa 18:18, where we read that Absalom, in the prospect of dying childless, erected the pillar to his own memory which was known as “Absalom’s hand ” (cf. also 1Sa 15:12, R.V. marg.). The case of those here spoken of is precisely similar. They have “no son to keep their name in remembrance,” but their memory shall be perpetuated by a monument erected within the Templewalls; and such a memorial, testifying to the esteem of the whole community, is better (and more enduring) than sons and daughters.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Will I give in mine house – That is, they shalt be admitted to all the privileges of entering my house of prayer, and of being regarded as my true worshippers, and this shall be to them a more invaluable privilege than would be any earthly advantages. The word house here refers undoubtedly to the temple, regarded as emblematic of the place of public worship in all ages.
And within my walls – The walls of the city where God dwelt, referring primarily to the walls of Jerusalem. They should be permitted to dwell with God, and be admitted to all the privileges of others. All, of all classes and conditions, under the reign of the Messiah, should be regarded as on a level, and entitled to equal advantages. There should be no religious disabilities arising from caste, age, country, color, or rank of life. Those who had any physical defect should not on that account be excluded from his favor, or be regarded as not entitled to his offers of mercy. The lame, therefore, the halt, the blind; the man of color, the african, the red man of the woods; the Hindu and the Islander; all are to be regarded as alike invited to participate in the favor of God, and none are to be excluded from the house erected to his praise, and from within the walls of the holy city where he dwells.
A place – Hebrew, yad – A hand. The word is, however, used to denote a place Deu 23:13; Num 2:17; Jos 8:10. It is sometimes used in the sense of monument, or trophy 1Sa 15:12; 2Sa 18:18, as if a monument were a handpointing out or showing anything. The word here denotes, however, a place, and means that the excluded foreigner and the eunuch should be admitted to a place in the temple of God; that is, should be admitted to the favor of God, and be permitted to dwell with him.
And a name – As it was regarded among the Hebrews as one of the highest honors to have a numerous posterity, the idea here is, that they should be admitted to the highest possible honor – the honor of being regarded as the children of God, and treated as his friends.
And I will give them an everlasting name – Their memory shall not perish. They shall be admitted to eternal and unchangeable honors – the everlasting honor of being treated as the friends of God.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Isa 56:5
Even unto them will I give
God gives, but not indiscriminately
Again and again the Lord says will I give, and I will give.
He is always giving; He lives to give. God so loved the world that He gave; His hands are outstretched in continual dispensation of blessing. Observe here the usual condition upon which great honour are promised. This is not an indiscriminate rain of benediction, clouds emptying themselves without regard to character; it is not a confusion of man with man; but there is a principle of discrimination, election, selection, or choice,, running,, through the whole action. (J. Parker, D. D.)
A place and a name
A place
The noun offers several meanings suitable in this passage. It signifies a monument or memorial, as a lofty indicator or pointer Eze 21:24), as a finger-post pointing to the person for whom it has been erected (2Sa 18:18; 1Sa 15:12); in this sense, however, the word would declare more than the promise permits one to expect. The Semitic term also signifies a place (Num 2:17; Deu 23:12; Jer 6:3), and a share or portion (2Sa 19:43). (F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
Gods promise to pious eunuchs
There seems no reason to doubt that the promise is to be understood literally. An illustration of what is meant is found in 2Sa 18:18, where we read that Absalom, in the prospect of dying childless, erected the pillar to his own memory which was known as Absaloms hand (also 1Sa 15:12, R.V. marg.). The case of those here spoken of is precisely similar. They have no son to keep their name in remembrance, but their memory shall be perpetuated by a monument erected within the temple walls;, and such a memorial, testifying to the esteem of the whole community, is better (and more enduring) than sons and daughters. (Prof. J. Skinner, D. D.)
Better than sons and daughters
Better than sons and daughters may either mean better than the comfort immediately derived from children (as in Rth 4:15), or, better than the perpetuation of the name by hereditary succession. Most interpreters prefer the latter sense, but both may be included. A beautiful coincidence and partial fulfilment of the promise is pointed out by J. D. Michaelis, in the case of the Ethiopian eunuch, whose conversion is recorded in Act 8:7, and whose memory is far more honoured in the Church than it could have been by a long line of illustrious descendants. (B. A. Alexander.)
I will give them an everlasting name
Names
Our greatest poet asks, Whats in a name? but whoever reads his Bible carefully will see that the Jews attached very great importance to names. Thus we often find in the Bible that the name of a person is used when the person himself is meant, as for example, The name of the God of Jacob defend thee;–we will call upon the name of the Lord;–let their name be blotted out that they may be no more a nation. Jewish parents never gave their children a name for the sake of its sound, but because it expressed some peculiarity in the child, or some circumstance connected with its birth, or some wish for its future career. God Himself set this example when He named the first man Adam–red earth–to commemorate the fact that dust he was, and unto dust he should return.
The noblest name
1. Every Christian parent who now takes a child to the font of baptism should try and choose a name with some good meaning in it, and should endeavour to bring up the child to live a life worthy of its name, even as the parents of Timothy gave him a name which means one who fears God, and early taught him in the Holy Scriptures that he might learn what God would have him to do.
2. No matter what name our parents may have given us, all who are baptized have the very best of names. It is the name of Christ, the name of Christian.
(1) It is the oldest name, older than all the Howards or Sydneys of England, older than Saxon or Norman, or Jew, or Greek, or Roman. The name of Christ, which we bear, is from everlasting.
(2) It is the noblest name; most great families derive their name from some famous act of their founder, some great victory, or some wide estate; our name is better than all, for we are named after the greatest Conqueror, one who triumphed at the price of His own blood, one who conquered Death and Satan, and opened the kingdom of heaven to all believers. We are a royal family, for we bear the name of the King of kings, a better name than that of Caesar, or Pharaoh, or Tudor, or Stuart: all old families have a crest and a coat of arms, but our arms are the best, and they are the Cross.
(3) It is an everlasting name; some of the grandest old names in England have died out, many of the proudest family names are only to be seen on a tomb, but the name of our family will never be extinct, it becomes better known every year, and will be spread far and wide till the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of God, as the waters cover the sea. What, then, is required of us who bear such a name? The son of a good father would not willingly disgrace the name which has been made famous, so we must remember whose name we bear. (J. W. Buxton.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 5. I will give them an everlasting name] For lo, him, in the singular, it is evident that we ought to read lamo, them, in the plural: so read the Septuagint, Syriac, Chaldee, and Vulgate.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
In mine house; in my temple, to serve me there as priests, which eunuchs were not allowed to do, Lev 21:17, &c.; Deu 23:1.
Within my walls; in the courts of my temple, which were encompassed with walls. This seems to be added with respect to the people, who were admitted into the court, but not into the house itself.
A place and a name better than of sons and of daughters; a far greater blessing and honour than that of having posterity, which was but a temporal mercy, and that common to the worst of men; even my favour, and my Spirit, and eternal felicity.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
5. in mine housethe temple,the emblem of the Church (1Ti3:15). They shall no longer be confined as proselytes were, tothe outer court, but shall be admitted “into the holiest”(Heb 10:19; Heb 10:20).
a placeliterally, “ahand.”
than of sonsThough theeunuch is barren of children (Isa56:3), I will give him a more lasting name than that of beingfather of sons and daughters (regarded as a high honor among theHebrews) (Joh 1:12; Joh 10:3;1Jn 3:1; Rev 2:17;Rev 3:12).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Even to them will I give in mine house and within my walls,…. The Targum is,
“in the house of my sanctuary, and in the land of the house of my Shechinah;”
meaning the temple at Jerusalem, in the land of Judea; but a Gospel church state is here meant, which is the house of God; the materials of which are true believers; the foundation Christ; the pillars and beams of it are the ministers of the word; the windows the ordinances, the door into it faith in Christ, and a profession of it; the provisions of it the word and ordinances; the stewards of it the preachers of the Gospel; where are saints of various sorts, fathers, young men, and children; where Christ is as a son over his own house, and acts as Prophet, Priest, and King, there. This is the Lord’s house, it is of his building, where he dwells, which he keeps, repairs, beautifies, and adorns; here he promises to give the persons before described
a place and a name better than of sons and of daughters; a “place” of entrance and admission into his house, for continuance to dwell in; a place of honour, profit, and pleasure; a place of comfort, rest, ease, and quietness; a place of fulness at the table of the Lord; a fixed, abiding, settled place; or “a hand” o, which may signify a part, portion, lot, or inheritance, 2Sa 19:43 or a statue or pillar,
2Sa 18:18, and a “name”, not of office, for all in it are not officers; nor a mere name in a church book, which to have only is of no avail; nor the mere name of a professor, which men may have, and be dead; but a good name, as a church member: and such an one is he who keeps his place in the church; seeks to maintain peace and brotherly love in it; lays himself out for the welfare of it; is ready to contribute according to his ability for the support of it; and whose life and conversation is becoming the Gospel of Christ; moreover, by this name may be meant the name of the people of God, he being their covenant God; or of the priests of God, as all the saints are under the Gospel dispensation; or of Christians, as they are now called; or rather of the sons of God, which is the new name that is given them, and is a more excellent name
than of sons and daughters; that is, than to have sons and daughters, the want of which the eunuch complained of; or than to be the sons and daughters of the greatest potentate on earth:
I will give them an everlasting name, that shall never be cut off; such is their good name in the church, and is spoken well of in later ages, is had in everlasting remembrance, and will be confessed by Christ at the last day; and such is their name as the children of God, for, once sons, no more servants, the name and relation will always continue; and both this name and place are the gift of God; it is he that brings them to his house, and gives them a place there, and enables them to behave well in it, so as to have a good name; and it is he that gives them the name, privilege, power, and relation of children, which shall never be cut off by any act of their own, or his, or by men, or devils; such a name had the eunuch, converted and baptized by Philip, Ac 8:27.
o “manum”, Montanus, Cocceius. Ben Melech interprets it by
, “place”; and observes, that not at coporeal place is intended, but a place, of honour, excellency, dignity, and praise.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
5. I will give to them in my house. Here we see that all men, however unworthy, may obtain admission into the kingdom of God: he alludes to Jerusalem, and to the temple in which the Lord placed a memorial of his name. No place was given in it to any but to the Jews alone; and they would have reckoned the temple to be polluted, if any of the Gentiles had entered into it. Hence also a serious insurrection arose against Paul for having brought into the temple uncircumcised persons. The Lord now admits, without distinction, those whom he previously forbade; and indeed he set aside this distinction, when we, who were the children of strangers, were brought by him into the temple, that is, into his Church, which is not confined, as formerly, within those narrow limits of Judea, but is extended through the whole world.
A place and a name. יד (yad) is here put for place, as in many other passages. It might also be supposed to denote “authority,” or “power;“ for they shall be elevated to such dignity as to be accounted the children of God.
Better than of sons and of daughters. A question may arise, Does the Lord compare the Jews who were at that time in the Church, with the believers whom he shall afterwards place in their room; or, does he contrast the future condition of the people with their condition at that time? For it is certain that “the name” of the Gentiles is “better” than that of the Jews, who were “cut off on account of their unbelief;“ and we have succeeded in their room, “as wild olives ingrafted into a good olive tree,” as Paul says. (Rom 11:24) The meaning’ might therefore be, that “eunuchs” and “foreigners” shall have “a better name” than children and domestics, who were regarded as God’s heritage. But I choose rather to explain it in a different manner, namely, that the dignity of believers shall be higher under Christ than it was under the Law. The patriarchs had a very excellent “name,” when they called upon God as their Father, and were joined in covenant with him; but the grace of God has been far more abundantly poured out upon us since the coming of Christ; and therefore we have obtained in him a far more excellent name.
A perpetual name. He calls this name “perpetual,” because it is written in heaven, where it shall live and flourish throughout all ages. Wicked men wish to have their name made illustrious in this world, and labor to promote their reputation, that the remembrance of their name may last for ever; but it is fading and of short duration. But far different is this name; for it makes us heirs of the heavenly kingdom, so that in the presence of angels we are reckoned to be the children of God.
We might also interpret מבנים ( mibbanim) to mean, “than the name which is derived from children; (99) for men, by having children, do in some respect perpetuate their own name. He promises that this name shall be far more excellent. But I prefer to follow the former exposition.
(99) “A place and name more excellent than that which comes from children.” Doederlein. “More excellent and longer lived than that name which the fathers of families procure for themselves by the succession of posterity.” Rosenmuller.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(5) Even unto them will I give . . .The words may refer simply to the spiritual blessedness of the faithful (Rev. 2:17; Rev. 3:5), but the customs of Eastern temples and of the later synagogues suggest that they may refer primarily to the memorial tablets which were put up in such places in commemoration of distinguished benefactors. For place read memorial. We note, of course, the special adaptation of the words better than of sons and daughters to the case which the prophet has in view; but it has to be remembered also that the whole promise substitutes the principle of catholicity for the rubrics of exclusiveness which we find in Deu. 23:1.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Isa 56:5 Even unto them will I give in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off.
Ver. 5. Even unto them will I give in mine house. ] In the Church of the New Testament. Eph 2:19-21
A place.
And a name.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
place: or, trophy. Hebrew hand.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
will I: Mat 16:18, Eph 2:22, 1Ti 3:15, Heb 3:6
and a: Isa 62:12, Joh 1:12, 1Jo 3:1, Rev 3:12
better: 1Sa 1:8
that shall: Isa 55:13, Rev 3:5
Reciprocal: Gen 15:2 – childless Gen 17:9 – General Exo 33:21 – place by Ezr 9:8 – in his holy place Neh 2:20 – memorial Psa 45:15 – they shall Ecc 7:1 – name Isa 56:3 – neither Jer 12:16 – built Joh 2:16 – make Rom 8:15 – the Spirit 1Jo 3:2 – now are we the
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
56:5 Even to them will I give in my {e} house and within my walls a place and a {f} name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off.
(e) Meaning, in his Church.
(f) They will be called after my people, and be of the same religion: yea, under Christ the dignity of the faithful will be greater than the Jews were at that time.