Isaiah 40:30

30 deficient pueri et laborabunt et iuvenes in infirmitate cadent

Isaiah 40:30 Meaning and Commentary

Isaiah 40:30

Even the youths shall faint and be weary
Such as are in the prime of their strength, and glory in it, yet through the hand of God upon them, by one disease or another, their strength is weakened in the way; or they meet with that which they are not equal to, and sink under, and are discouraged, and obliged to desist. Some think the Babylonians and Chaldeans are here meant, the enemies of Israel, and by whom they were carried captive. The Targum interprets this clause, as well as the following, of wicked and ungodly men; and so do Jarchi and Kimchi: it may be applied to the Heathen emperors, who persecuted the church of God, and were smitten by him, and found it too hard a work to extirpate Christianity out of the world, which they thought to have done; and also to all the antichristian states, who have given their power and strength to the beast: and the young men shall utterly fail;
or, "falling shall fall" F6; stumble and fall, die and perish; or, however, not be able to perform their enterprise.


FOOTNOTES:

F6 (wlvky lwvk) "corruendo corruent", Montanus; "labefacti cadent", Castalio.

Isaiah 40:30 In-Context

28 numquid nescis aut non audisti Deus sempiternus Dominus qui creavit terminos terrae non deficiet neque laborabit nec est investigatio sapientiae eius
29 qui dat lasso virtutem et his qui non sunt fortitudinem et robur multiplicat
30 deficient pueri et laborabunt et iuvenes in infirmitate cadent
31 qui autem sperant in Domino mutabunt fortitudinem adsument pinnas sicut aquilae current et non laborabunt ambulabunt et non deficient
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.