Ésaïe 20:3

3 Alors l'Éternel dit: Comme Ésaïe, mon serviteur, a marché nu et déchaussé, ce qui est un signe et un présage contre l'Égypte et contre l'Éthiopie pour trois années;

Ésaïe 20:3 Meaning and Commentary

Isaiah 20:3

And the Lord said
Here follows the explanation of the sign, and the accommodation of it to the thing signified by it:

like as my servant Isaiah hath walked naked and barefoot;
not wholly naked, for that would have been very indecent and dangerous indeed; but without his upper garment, as Saul, ( 1 Samuel 19:24 ) and David, ( 2 Samuel 6:14 2 Samuel 6:20 ) or with rent and ragged clothes, and old shoes, as Jarchi F11 interprets it, and which might be only when he appeared abroad; and how long he thus walked is not certain, whether only one day, as some, or three days, as others, or three years, which is not said, though our version inclines to it; but the three years next mentioned are not to be joined to Isaiah's walking, but to the thing signified by it; for the accent "athnach" is at the word which is rendered "barefoot", and distinguishes this clause from the following. The Septuagint indeed puts the phrase "three years" into both clauses, but it only belongs to the latter:

three years [for] a sign and wonder upon Egypt, and upon Ethiopia;
that is, the prophet's walking naked and barefoot was a sign that three years after this Egypt and Ethiopia should be subdued by the Assyrians; or, that so long he should be in subduing them, or their calamities should last such a term of time. This sign was only seen by the Jews, for whose sake chiefly this prophecy was, to take off their dependence on the above nations; though probably this might be made known to the Egyptians and Ethiopians.


FOOTNOTES:

F11 T. Bab. Yoma, fol. 77. 1. & Sabbat, fol. 114. 1.

Ésaïe 20:3 In-Context

1 L'année où Tharthan vint à Asdod, envoyé par Sargon, roi d'Assyrie, assiégea Asdod et la prit;
2 En ce temps-là, l'Éternel parla par le ministère d'Ésaïe, fils d'Amots, et lui dit: Va, détache le sac de tes reins, et ôte tes souliers de tes pieds; ce qu'il fit, allant nu et déchaussé.
3 Alors l'Éternel dit: Comme Ésaïe, mon serviteur, a marché nu et déchaussé, ce qui est un signe et un présage contre l'Égypte et contre l'Éthiopie pour trois années;
4 Ainsi le roi d'Assyrie emmènera les captifs de l'Égypte et les exilés de l'Éthiopie, jeunes hommes et vieillards, nus et déchaussés, le dos découvert, à la honte de l'Égypte.
5 Alors ils seront consternés et confus au sujet de l'Éthiopie, leur espérance, et de l'Égypte, leur gloire.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.