Isaiah 3:23 (BSB)
and their mirrors, linen garments, tiaras, and shawls.
From Isaiah 3. Also in the ESV.
Commentary on Isaiah 3:23
- Matthew Henry (Presbyterian), Matthew Henry's Complete Commentary on Isaiah 3:16-26: The prophet's business was to show all sorts of people what they had contributed to the national guilt and what share they must expect in the national judgments that were coming. Here he reproves and warns the daughters of Zion, tells the ladies of their faults; and Moses, in the law, having denounced God's wrath against the tender and delicate woman (the prophets being a...
- John Gill (Reformed Baptist), Exposition of the Old and New Testaments on Isaiah 3:23: The glasses,.... Looking glasses, by which they dressed themselves, see Exo 38:8 and so Kimchi explains the word; but elsewhere (e) he says it signifies thin garments, so called because the flesh is seen through them, being so exceeding thin; which sense is favoured by the Septuagint version, which renders it by garments which the Lacedemonians wore, which were so thin and transparent, that the...
- Jamieson-Fausset-Brown (Reformed), Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible on Isaiah 3:23: glasses--mirrors of polished metal (Exo 38:8). But the Septuagint, a transparent, gauze-like, garment. hoods--miters, or diadems (Isa 62:3; Zac 3:5). veils--large enough to cover the head and person. Distinct from the smaller veils ("mufflers") above (Gen 24:65). Token of woman's subjection (Co1 11:10).
- Geneva Bible Notes (Reformed), Geneva Bible Study Notes on Isaiah 3:23: The mirrors, and the fine linen, and the turbans, and the veils. (s) In rehearsing all these things particularly he shows the lightness and vanity of such as cannot be content with comely apparel according to their degree.