Isaiah
Isaiah 44:27ESV·traditional attribution

who says to the deep, ‘Be dry; I will dry up your rivers’;

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

27. Saying to the deep. This is generally considered to be an allegorical description of Babylon, and I certainly do not deny that it is included; but yet I cannot think of limiting it to Babylon, for I prefer to view it simply as denoting any unexpected change.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

In these verses we have, I. The duty which Jacob and Israel, now in captivity, were called to, that they might be qualified and prepared for the deliverance designed them. Our first care must be to get good by our afflictions, and then we may hope to get out of them.

Commenting on Isaiah 44:21-28

John Gill Reformed Baptist @doctorgill

That saith to the deep, be dry,.... The Targum is, "that saith to Babylon, be desolate;'' and most interpreters, Jewish and Christian, understand it of Babylon, which was situated in a watery place, by rivers of water, particularly the river Euphrates, and in a low valley: and I will dry up thy rivers; some think the allusion is to the stratagem of Cyrus, made use...