Howl ye, for the day of the Lord is at hand
These words are an address to the Babylonians, who instead of
rejoicing and feasting, as Belshazzar and his nobles were the
night that Babylon was taken, had reason to howl and lament;
seeing the day that the Lord had fixed for their destruction was
very near, and he was just about to come forth as a judge to take
vengeance on them; for though it was about two hundred and fifty
years from the time of this prophecy, to the taking of Babylon,
yet it is represented as at hand, to show the certainty of it,
both for the comfort of the Jewish captives, when they should be
in it, and for the awakening of the sluggish inhabitants, who
were secure, and thought themselves out of danger: it shall
come as a destruction from the Almighty:
suddenly, swiftly, and irresistibly: there is a beautiful
paronomasia in the Hebrew text, "ceshod mishaddai" F3; as
destruction from the destroyer; from God, who is able to save,
and to destroy; he is almighty and all sufficient, so some render
the word; the hand of God was visible in it.