Isaiah 47:8

8 et nunc audi haec delicata et habitans confidenter quae dicis in corde tuo ego sum et non est praeter me amplius non sedebo vidua et ignorabo sterilitatem

Isaiah 47:8 Meaning and Commentary

Isaiah 47:8

Therefore hear now this, thou that art given to pleasures
To carnal lusts and pleasures; gratifying her sensual appetite; indulging herself in everything that was agreeable to the senses; abounding in delicacies, and living deliciously; as is said of mystical Babylon, ( Revelation 18:4 Revelation 18:7 ) , particularly given to venereal pleasures. Curtius says F7,

``no city was more corrupt in its manners, or furnished to irritate or allure to immoderate pleasures. Parents and husbands suffered their children and wives to prostitute themselves to strangers, so that they had but a price.''
Yea, every woman was obliged by a law to do this once in life, and that in a public manner, in the temple of Venus; the impurities of which are at large described by Herodotus F8 and Strabo F9: that dwelleth carelessly;
in great confidence and security, being fearless of danger, and insensible of any: that sayest in thine heart, I am, and none else besides me:
sole monarch of the world, empress of the whole universe; no competitor with me, none that can rival me. These words are sometimes used by the eternal and unchangeable Jehovah of himself, and indeed they suit with none but him; and it is the height of insolence and blasphemy in a creature to use them of itself; they fitly express that sovereignty, supremacy, infallibility, and even deity, which mystical Babylon assumes and ascribes to her head: I shall not sit as a widow, neither shall I know the loss of children;
not be without a head, king, or monarch, which is as a husband to the state; nor without numerous subjects, which are as children. The like mystical Babylon says, "I sit a queen, and am no widow", ( Revelation 18:7 ) .
FOOTNOTES:

F7 Hist. l. 5. c. 1. sect. 1.
F8 Clio, sive l. 1. c. 199.
F9 Geograph. l. 16. p. 513.

Isaiah 47:8 In-Context

6 iratus sum super populum meum contaminavi hereditatem meam et dedi eos in manu tua non posuisti eis misericordias super senem adgravasti iugum tuum valde
7 et dixisti in sempiternum ero domina non posuisti haec super cor tuum neque recordata es novissimi tui
8 et nunc audi haec delicata et habitans confidenter quae dicis in corde tuo ego sum et non est praeter me amplius non sedebo vidua et ignorabo sterilitatem
9 venient tibi duo haec subito in die una sterilitas et viduitas universa venerunt super te propter multitudinem maleficiorum tuorum et propter duritiam incantatorum tuorum vehementem
10 et fiduciam habuisti in malitia tua et dixisti non est qui videat me sapientia tua et scientia tua haec decepit te et dixisti in corde tuo ego sum et praeter me non est altera
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.