Commentaries:
Barnes' Notes
The Lord hath mingled - The word mâsak , "to mingle," is used commonly to denote the act of mixing spices with wine to make it more intoxicating Proverbs 9:2, Proverbs 9:5; Isaiah 5:22. Here it means that Yahweh has poured out into the midst of them a spirit of giddiness; that is, has produced consternation among them. National commotions and calamities are often thus traced to the overruling providence of God (see the note at Isaiah 19:2; compare Isaiah 10:5-6).
A perverse spirit - Hebrew, ' A spirit of perverseness.' The word rendered ' perverse' is derived from ‛âvâh , "to be crooked or perverted." Here it means, that their counsels were unwise, land such as tended to error and ruin.
To err as a drunken man ... - This is a very striking figure. The whole nation was reeling to and fro, and unsettled in their counsels, as a man is who is so intoxicated as to reel and to vomit. Nothing could more strikingly express, first, the "fact" of their perverted counsels and plans, and secondly, God' s deep abhorrence of the course which they were pursuing.
Other Barnes' Notes entries containing Isaiah 19:14:
Job 12:25
Isaiah 19:15
Isaiah 19:18
Isaiah 28:7
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