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Isaiah 48:22

There is no peace, says the LORD, unto the wicked.
Read Chapter 48

Cyril of Alexandria

AD 444
No one found that this happened when they came out of Babylon and went into Judah. For this is said with reference to the economy of salvation so as to show that God, who was formerly able and is still now able, being of undiminished power, to perform similar miracles with great strength, now, as if calling out, proclaims a universal law, that “there is no peace for the wicked.” - "Commentary on Isaiah 4.3.48.20–22"

George Leo Haydock

AD 1849
Peace. Septuagint, "rejoicing "or prosperity for the Chaldeans or wicked Jews, ver. 18. (Calmet) It is promised only to the penitent. (Worthington)

Jerome

AD 420
Some say that so we might know that this prophecy is not about Christ but about Cyrus, the phrase is added, “there is no peace for the ungodly, says the Lord.” This would mean that there will be no perfect happiness except under Christ, which is reserved for the last times. Yet those who more truly and rightly apply these words to the advent of the Savior, about whom it is said, “He has sent me to announce to the poor, to preach liberty to the captives,” understand it to be an encouragement of those who preach the gospel or of the Lord and Savior, that we leave Babylon, that is, the confusion of this world, and flee the Babylonians.… For the Lord has redeemed his servant Jacob with his most precious blood and led him through the desert and made a way for water to come out of a rock, about which the apostle said, “The Rock was Christ.” … And lest it be thought that the prophecy is said about all the seed of Jacob, and not those only who would believe through the apostles, mention is als...

Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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