Isaiah 42:10-25
42:10
The new song is in response to verses 1-9
The fulfilled promise of deliverance and the fact that a
nation (
As far as deliverance goes, all the nations should rejoice because God would do the same for Gentiles.
42:11
Starting from the outer limits in verse 10 and coming into the close cities rejoicing is called for in this new song.
Kedar was the second son of Ishmael. These were the people who lived in the
“Settlements” refers to the villages of the Bedouin people.
42:12
Islands would be Gentiles
The whole world not just
42:13
The Warrior/Lord describes his second coming.
This is ultimately when the servant of the Lord is revealed.
42:14
The Lord says he had been silent. This could refer to:
a) the Babylonian captivity
b) the years between Malachi and Matthew
c) all the years leading up until his second coming
The point: just because God is silent it does not mean he is not going to respond.
The War Cry breaks God’s silence.
Like the blood curdling scream/war cry of the attacking army
Like the cry in labor after 9 months of silence.
42:15
The Lord will change things when he responds. Even the things that seem unchangeable like mountains. How much more other things.
42:16
He will open the eyes of the blind. This refers to spiritual blindness.
42:17
Those who refuse to be delivered by this coming servant of the Lord will be shamed.
42:18-25 God’s Chosen Servant (
42:18
The deaf are now told by the Lord to hear
He tells the blind to see
God would lead his servants into light.
42:19
Who is the blindest? Who is the most deaf?
The servants of the Lord!
Isaiah describes the Servant of the Lord who will come and deliver his people.
Now, Isaiah describes
God’s servants are blind and deaf. How bad off are those to whom
42:20
They have seen, but have not paid attention.
Their ears are fine, but they hear nothing.
Their attitude prevented them from responding and hearing
42:21-25
It is sad today when history is poorly taught, not learned from or God is removed from it.
We are a culture that is failing to read, understand and apply history.
Humanism, political correctness and anti-Christian bias are idols (false gods, false philosophies) that cloud our understanding and prevent us from correctly evaluating where we are at in time as a culture and what is the next obvious events that God is going to bring to us. When they do come we will be too spiritually dull to understand what is going on. We will misjudge the situation and blame someone or something that our false gods have led us to believe.
We will perish and never know why.
We live in a moral universe with a righteous God at the control center.
42:21
God revealed his righteousness in the Law but
God’s greatest demonstration of his glory was not understood.
God wanted to make the Law great because he is righteous and he want the truth to be glorified and honored among men.
The Lord’s messengers have failed to perceive the message.
The knowledge of God was to be planted in
The world is today waiting and wanting this instruction.
See Isaiah 2:3
Isaiah 42:4
Isaiah 51:4
This is not the spread of legalism. But the advancement of truth, reality and righteousness.
42:22
Instead of delivering people for God, they themselves need to be delivered.
42:23
This verse is an expression of God’s longing for someone to consider what he has been revealing and come to the correct conclusion.
The Hebrew phrase is similar to:
God is desiring that someone would understand so they could explain it to others.
If someone would learn from history God is saying then things could change.
If they do not then the same mistakes are going to happen over and over and over again.
God is laying down in these verses their situation, his truth and the information they need. But, will anyone even be able to process and understand this chapter?
“in time to come” is “ahor” and means “a later time”
42:24
Isaiah is trying to be the good teacher here and draw on the student’s previous knowledge.
He is trying to lead them to come to the correct conclusion with their own reasoning.
Who handed Jacob over?
This is a reference to the coming Babylonian captivity.
The Lord handed them over.
Why did he do it?
a) they would not follow God’s ways
b) they did not obey God’s law
There were probably a list of incorrect answers to these questions.
Wrong answers that
Some wrong answers might be:
In
Nehemiah 1:8, 9
Nehemiah 9:32-37 “ . . .we are slaves today, slaves in the land you gave our forefathers so they could eat it s fruit. . .Because of our sins, its abundant harvest goes to the kings you have placed over us. They rule over our bodies and our cattle as they please.”
42:25
The servant is blind because he refuses to come to the correct conclusion concerning the experiences he has had with his God.
If
God’s anger against them was manifested in war.
God’s anger/war enveloped them but they did not understand
God’s anger/war consumed them but they did not allow it to change them