Category: <span>Major Prophets</span>

In the final chapters of the book of Isaiah, the prophet looked forward to a new day. Isaiah prophesied of a time when the people of God would be recognized as His showpiece and the nations would join them and experience the glory of the Lord. This framework had been God’s intent when He gave His people an inheritance in Canaan (Deut 4:1-8). Ironically, the Lord’s purpose would not be realized until after His people had been expelled from the land and finally allowed to return under Cyrus (2 Chron 36:22-23; Ezra 1:1-4). Yet, the glory of the second temple and rebuilt wall around Jerusalem could not compare with the vision of the prophet in Isaiah 60-66. The words of the prophet here contribute to the unfolding portrait of the Messiah and His reign in the storyline of Scripture.

(1) The Messiah would come with good news and victory. Luke recorded that early in Jesus’ ministry, Jesus went to a synagogue in Nazareth and when the scroll of Isaiah was handed to Him, Jesus found Isa 61:1-2. He read Isaiah’s prophecy of One anointed by the Spirit who would come preaching good news to the poor and announcing the year of the Lord’s favor, recovery of sight to the blind, and freedom for captives (Luke 4:18-19). Luke wrote that when Jesus finished speaking, everyone in the synagogue was looking at Jesus and Jesus told them, “Today as you listen, this Scripture has been fulfilled” (Luke 4:20-21). But the fulfillment of the messianic theme in Isaiah 60-66 is not limited to the Gospels. Isaiah’s prophecy of the Lord as a victorious warrior against the nations who opposed Him (Isa 63:1-6) may have been in John’s mind when he wrote of the Rider on the white horse who would come to strike the nations with the sharp sword coming out of His mouth (Rev 19:11-15). Accordingly, any who rejected His coming and His message would be destroyed in hell. Isaiah ended his prophecy by describing the place of judgement as an eternal fire (Isa 66:24) and Jesus used the same imagery when speaking of the destination of those who opposed His teaching (Matt 18:8-9//Mark 9:46-48).

(2) The Messiah would come for Israel and the Gentile nations. Isaiah voiced Israel’s petition for mercy and deliverance from the Lord. The Lord responded, “I was sought by those who did not ask; I was found by those who did not seek Me. I said: Here I am, here I am, to a nation that was not called by My name. I spread out My hands all day long to a rebellious people” (Isa 65:1-2a). Paul employed Isaiah’s prophecy to the Jewish people of his own day. The Messiah had come from them and for them, yet just as Jews of Paul’s day had rejected the witness of the prophets of old, they rejected Jesus’ message too (Rom 10:20-21). Isaiah’s message from the Lord, “Heaven is My throne, and earth is My footstool. What house could you possibly build for Me? And what place could be My home? My hand made all these things…I will look favorably on this kind of a person: one who is humble, submissive in spirit, and who trembles at My word” (Isa 66:1-2), was quoted by Stephen to confront the Jews of his day—those who had crucified Jesus and accused Stephen of blaspheming the temple—for elevating the temple above Him (Acts 7:49-50). The Jewish leadership had not recognized the new temple of Jesus and God’s covenant mercy to all nations in Him. Isaiah prophesied that together Israel and the chosen Gentiles would be His witness, saying, “Nations will come to your light, and kings to the brightness of your radiance” (Isa 60:3). John reiterated Isaiah’s prophecy in describing the heavenly Jerusalem, illuminated by God and the Lamb. “The nations will walk in its light,” John said, “and the kings of the earth will bring their glory into it” (Rev 21:24). Further, John noted of the heavenly city, “Each day its gates will never close because it will never be night there. They [the kings of the earth] will bring the glory and honor of the nations into it” (Rev 21:25-26). Likewise, Isaiah had prophesied concerning the future of Jerusalem, “Your gates will always be open; they will never be shut day or night so that the wealth of the nations may be brought into you, with their kings being led in procession” (Isa 60:11).

(3) The people of the Messiah would be priests. Isaiah wrote that during the Messiah’s jubilee His people would be called priests of the Lord, ministers of God (Isa 61:6). In Isa 62:12, Isaiah wrote that the people of the Messiah would be called His holy ones. Even some from among the nations would be priests and Levites, Isaiah said (Isa 66:21). In his heavenly vision, John heard 24 elders singing to the Lamb, “You redeemed people for God by Your blood from every tribe and language and people and nation. You made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they will reign on the earth” (Rev 5:9b-10). Peter likewise saw the significance of these texts in light of the coming of Christ; to the dispersed of his day, Peter wrote, “You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his possession, so that you may proclaim the praises of the one who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light” (1 Pet 2:9).

(4) The people of the Messiah would experience previously unknown intimacy with God, in the new creation. Isaiah prophesied of a future day when the Lord would create a new heaven and a new earth where He would delight in His people (Isa 65:17; 66:22). In Revelation, John echoed Isaiah, saying, “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea existed no longer. I also saw the Holy City, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God” (Rev 21:1-2). Isaiah wrote, “The sun will no longer be your light by day, and the brightness of the moon will not shine on you; but the LORD will be your everlasting light, and your God will be your splendor” (Isa 60:19). John employed these themes when describing the heavenly Jerusalem: “Look! God’s dwelling is with men, and He will live with them. They will be His people, and God Himself will be with them and be their God” (Rev 21:23); “The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, because God’s glory illuminates it, and its lamp is the Lamb” (Rev 21:23); and, “Night will no longer exist, and people will not need lamplight or sunlight, because the Lord God will give them light” (Rev 22:5). Isaiah prophesied that in the day of the Messiah and God’s special presence with His people, the days of their sorrow would be no more (Isa 60:20; 65:19), a theme echoed by John in his description of the heavenly Jerusalem—where tears, death, and grief will be no more (Rev 21:4).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

In the latter portions of the book of Isaiah, the prophet described the Lord’s saving acts for His people and the nations. In Isaiah 56-59, the prophet returned to themes that characterized his earlier oracles against the sins of Judah in chs. 1, 9, and 22. Here the prophet confronted Judah’s unfaithfulness but also set forth again the faithfulness of the Lord. The themes of condemnation and forgiveness presented in Isaiah 56-59 cast a long shadow, echoing through the storyline of Scripture. Isaiah prophesied that:

(1) The Lord would judge His people and the nations based upon their deeds. Isaiah stated that while the Lord was mighty and willing to save His people, Judah failed to humble herself and receive His salvation. Isaiah said, “Their feet run after evil, and they rush to shed innocent blood. Their thoughts are sinful thoughts; ruin and wretchedness are in their paths. They have not known the path of peace, and there is no justice in their ways” (Isa 59:7-8a). Paul saw the same in his day, concerning both Jews and Gentiles outside of Christ (Rom 3:15-17). While Isaiah exalted the role of the Sabbath and fasting, the people of his day only went through the motions, prompting the Lord’s rebuke: “Isn’t the fast I choose: To break the chains of wickedness…Is it not to share your bread with the hungry, to bring the poor and homeless into your house, to clothe the naked when you see him” (Isa 58:7). Jesus elevated these social demands further still, setting them out as the criterion by which nations would be evaluated at the final judgement (Matt 25:35-36). Isaiah announced the righteous judgment of the Lord in Isa 59:18, saying, “Thus He will repay according to their deeds: fury to His enemies, retribution to His foes, and He will repay the coastlands.” John understood Isaiah’s prophecy to be fulfilled at the return of Christ, whom He heard say, “Look! I am coming quickly, and My reward is with Me to repay each person according to what he has done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End” (Rev 22:12-13).

(2) The Lord would make known to all peoples His covenant of forgiveness. Perhaps more than any other Old Testament book, Isaiah proclaimed God’s intention to bring the nations into the covenant He had made with Israel. In Isaiah 56, the prophet announced that the Lord would deal equitably with His people and the nations. Concerning the nations, the Lord said, “I will bring them to My holy mountain and let them rejoice in My house of prayer. Their burnt offerings and sacrifices will be acceptable on My altar, for My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations” (Isa 56:7). When Jesus arrived in Jerusalem one week before His crucifixion, He entered the temple complex and confronted the Jewish leadership for allowing the court of the Gentiles—the sacred space Isaiah described as a place where Gentiles could pray—to become a den of thieves (Matt 21:13//Mark 11:17//Luke 19:46). The Jewish leadership had disregarded Isaiah’s message that Gentiles should have access to God and enjoy forgiveness of sin. Isaiah prophesied of the Lord’s covenant faithfulness to Israel, saying, “The Redeemer will come to Zion, and to those in Jacob who turn from transgression” (Isa 59:20). Paul argued that Jesus was the Redeemer about whom Isaiah prophesied (Rom 11:25-27). Since the Lord has sent Jesus to redeem Israel—and yet so few from Israel were believing in Paul’s day—Paul concluded that the Lord had hardened Israel for a time so that the full number of Gentiles would be engrafted into God’s people. Paul’s use of Isa 59:20 in Rom 11:26-27 had ethical implications. The Gentiles had no right to boast over their Jewish brothers. Salvation is of the Lord, Paul argued.

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

During the days of Isaiah’s ministry, God’s people felt abandoned like a wife who had been released by her husband (Isa 54:6). While the Lord was legitimately angry with His bride and sent her into captivity in Babylon and Persia, the prophet announced that the Lord would come to redeem Israel with great compassion (Isa 54:7). Isaiah 49-55 is a poetic, hopeful expression of God’s jealousy for His people, wavering not at all from the logic of Isaiah 1-39.

Many passages from Isaiah 49-55 resurface in the New Testament. The writers of the Gospels and Epistles understood Isaiah’s message to have an initial significance for Judah but also serve as a schematic for the storyline of Scripture and the days of the Messiah. Broadly speaking, Isaiah 49-55 describes:

(1) The salvation offered by the Messiah. Concerning the salvation the Lord would bring to Judah, Isaiah proclaimed, “Look up to the heavens, and look at the earth beneath; for the heavens will vanish like smoke, the earth will wear out like a garment, and its inhabitants will die in like manner. But My salvation will last forever, and My righteousness will never be shattered” (Isa 51:6). The author of Hebrews understood this salvation to be offered uniquely in the enduring constancy of Jesus Christ (Heb 1:10-12). Isaiah called Israel to hope in God for salvation. Though in the prophet’s day Israel was like a barren, forsaken mother, she would one day have more children than a married woman (Isa 54:1). Paul employed Isaiah’s prophesy to help the churches of Galatia understand the supernatural nature of salvation (Gal 4:27). Isaiah noted that when the Lord judged His people and allowed other nations to rule them, those nations blasphemed God’s name (Isa 52:5). In Rom 2:24, Paul portrayed Isa 52:5 as a description of how God’s name was blasphemed because of Jewish hypocrisy. Because Jews could not keep the law, they needed to believe upon Christ just like the Gentiles.

(2) The suffering of the Messiah and the suffering of His followers. Isaiah may have been writing autobiographically when he said, “I gave My back to those who beat Me, and My cheeks to those who tore out My beard. I did not hide My face from scorn and spitting,” (Isa 50:6), but these expressions ultimately predict Jesus in the day of His crucifixion (Matt 26:67//Mark 14:65//Luke 22:63//John 19:1-5). Isaiah described the Servant of the Lord as one who had been rejected (Isa 53:3), a sentiment Jesus expressed concerning His own suffering and death at the hands of the Gentiles (Matt 20:18-19//Mark 10:33-34//Luke 18:31-32). Peter’s admonition for his audience to submit to those in authority over them (1 Pet 2:22-25)—even if they suffered as a righteous person—was grounded in the suffering of the Messiah, according to Isa 53:5-9. When Philip encountered the Ethiopian eunuch reading Isa 53:7-8, Philip told him the good news about Jesus from that Scripture (Acts 8:35). Isaiah described the Lord’s servant as one who would submit Himself to death and be counted among the rebels (Isa 53:12), which Jesus said was fulfilled in His own death (Luke 22:37). Isaiah’s prediction of a slaughtered lamb in Isa 53:5, 7 is also echoed in John’s vision of the One like a slaughtered lamb who approached the throne to take the scroll (Rev 5:6).

(3) The missional status of the Messiah and His followers. Isaiah understood that the Servant of the Lord would come with blessings not only for Israel but also for the nations (Isa 49:6). When the righteous and devout man Simeon held Jesus at the time of Jesus’ dedication in the temple, Simeon cited Isaiah’s prophecy of blessing to the Gentiles (Luke 2:32). The scope of Isaiah’s prophecy went beyond the mission of the Messiah, having import also for those who proclaim Jesus. When Paul and Barnabas were rejected by the Jewish leadership in Pisidian Antioch, Paul applied Isa 49:6 to his ministry of preaching to the Gentiles (Acts 13:46-47). Isaiah set forth the Lord’s message to His servant: “I will answer you in a time of favor, and I will help you in the day of salvation” (Isa 49:8). Paul understood the Lord’s promise to be relevant for his apostleship when the Lord helped him to speak boldly to the Corinthians (2 Cor 6:2). Isaiah spoke of the glorious status of the Servant of the Lord as He proclaimed peace and the Lord’s reign (Isa 52:7), the message many Jews in Paul’s day failed to see in the gospel of Christ (Rom 10:15). Just as few believed in Isaiah’s day (Isa 53:1), few Jews believed the gospel during the ministry of Jesus or Paul (John 12:38, Rom 10:16). While Isaiah spoke about the benevolence of the Lord’s servant carrying the weaknesses and disease of Israel (Isa 53:4), Matthew saw in Jesus’ healings the clear fulfillment of the prophet’s speech (Matt 8:17). Isaiah prophesied that the Lord would make an everlasting covenant with His people in accord with the promises made to David (Isa 55:3). Paul understood Isaiah’s prophecy to be fulfilled in David’s descendant Jesus, whom God raised from the dead (Acts 13:34).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

While positioning the exact temporal reference of Isaiah 40-66 is difficult, the theological vision these chapters establish is easily discerned. Here God further showed His jealousy for Israel’s trust, employing polemics to arouse Judah to grasp both His superiority over the idols of the nations and His plan of redemption. Isaiah announced the Lord’s call for Israel to be His servant while they awaited the true Servant of the Lord—the One who would rule over them as the Messiah. While the prophecies of the latter portion of Isaiah had an initial situation in mind, many of the individual predictions are substantive for the storyline of Scripture.

(1) The Lord would send one to prepare the way for His Servant. In Isa 40:3-5, the prophet spoke of one who would prepare the way for the Lord. The Gospel writers spoke in concert that Isaiah was foretelling John the Baptist (Matt 3:3//Mark 1:3//Luke 3:4-6//John 1:23). The framework of John’s messages expressed Isaiah’s topographical references. Valleys, mountains, uneven ground, and rough places would all change, Isaiah said (Isa 40:4). John called his listeners to repent of self-centered religion, to share, resist opportunities for extortion, and go the extra mile (Luke 3:10-14).

(2) The Lord’s Servant would establish justice by performing acts of mercy. In Isa 42:1-4, Isaiah prophesied that the coming Servant of the Lord would be filled with the Spirit and establish justice. In the near term, Cyrus King of Persia was the Lord’s instrument, releasing the captives and allowing them to return and rebuild Jerusalem (Isa 44:24-28; Ezra 1:1-4). But the prophet’s description of the Lord’s Servant goes beyond Cyrus. Matthew saw in Jesus’ ministry in Galilee the kinds of activities that Isaiah wrote about in Isa 42:1-4. Large crowds followed Jesus and Jesus’ merciful acts to the lame, diseased, and tormented among them (Matt 12:15-21) were the fulfillment of Isaiah’s statement that the Lord’s Servant would mercifully right the wrongs plaguing humanity.

(3) The Lord’s Servant would lead a unified people. Both Peter and Paul understood some of Isaiah’s phrases as a basis for calling believers to pursue fellowship in the church. Paul used Isa 45:23 (“Every knee will bow to Me, every tongue will swear allegiance.”) to describe Jesus Christ’s ultimate glory—which resulted from His humble incarnation and crucifixion (Phil 2:10-11). Paul’s injunction to the Philippians was that each should “look out not only for his own interests, but also for the interests of others” (Phil 2:4)—as Christ did in coming to earth and suffering and dying—after which He was exalted to receive the homage Isaiah predicted. Peter quoted Isa 40:6b-8 (“All humanity is grass, and all its goodness is like the flower of the field. The grass withers, the flowers fade when the breath of the LORD blows on them; indeed, the people are grass. The grass withers, the flowers fade, but the word of our God remains forever.”) to justify the enduring power of the word of God unto regeneration (1 Pet 1:23-25). In Peter’s mind, Isaiah’s phrase was not merely a matter of doctrinal recitation but was the basis for his command for believers to love one another with devotion and purity (1 Pet 1:22).

(4) The Lord would redeem His people by destroying their opponents—quickly. The Lord had chosen Babylon as an instrument to discipline His people and promised to execute justice against them (Isaiah 47-48). Babylon was a lover of luxury, Isaiah said, thinking herself secure. But the Babylonians would suddenly be destroyed, like the one enduring the loss of children and spouse in the same day (Isa 47:8-9). John took up Isaiah’s portrayal of the downfall of Babylon writing that Babylon’s supposed self-security was paper-thin. In a single day, the Lord would destroy fortified Babylon (Rev 18:7-8).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

Much of the first thirty-nine chapters of the book of Isaiah are a contrast between two of Judah’s Kings: Ahaz (Isaiah 7-14; 2 Kings 16; 2 Chronicles 28) and Hezekiah (Isaiah 13-39; 2 Kings 18-20; 2 Chronicles 29-32). Isaiah exhorted the former to trust in the Lord and ask for a sign of deliverance from the Assyrian King, Tiglath-pileser (Isa 7:10-19; 2 Kgs 16:1-14). Ahaz rejected Isaiah’s message—and because he chose not to stand firm in his faith, he did not stand at all. Since the day of Ahaz’s disastrous decision, Isaiah had exhorted Judah to avoid any alliance with a foreign power and instead cast all of their expectations on the Lord—who alone could deliver them from the Assyrian siege. The drama of the narrative is thick; what would Hezekiah do?

King Sennacherib sent the Rabshakeh to intimidate Hezekiah in the by-then-surrounded city of Jerusalem (Isaiah 36). The Rabshakeh warned Hezekiah of trusting in Egypt and tried to persuade him against trusting in the Lord. The Assyrian leader was a man of political skill; why not just surrender to the Assyrian forces, he suggested, according to God’s will (Isa 36:8-10)? He taunted the people of Jerusalem, bidding them to do anything but trust the Lord—since no other god had been able to deliver its people from the mighty Assyrian forces (Isa 36:13-20).

“When King Hezekiah heard their report,” Isaiah noted, “he tore his clothes, put on sackcloth, and went to the house of the LORD” (Isa 37:1). Hezekiah sent an envoy to Isaiah, informing the prophet of the Rabshakeh’s boasts and asking him to intercede for the survival of the remnant. Judah’s king was a political leader with few political options left to his disposal; if Jerusalem were to be delivered, it would be by the grace of the Lord alone. Isaiah replied to the king with the word of the Lord, “Don’t be afraid because of the words you have heard, which the king of Assyria’s attendants have blasphemed Me with. Look! I am putting a spirit in him and he will hear a rumor and return to his own land, where I will cause him to fall by the sword” (Isa 37:6-7).

And it came about just as Isaiah prophesied. In light of a sudden threat from the king of Egypt, Sennacherib had to adjust his military strategy and pull back from Jerusalem (Isa 37:8-9a). Sennacherib did in fact go back the way he came (Isa 37:29, 34), after he saw 185,000 of the Assyrian warriors fallen from the angel of the Lord (Isa 37:36-37). While Hezekiah continued to trust in the Lord when he was terminally ill—and received a sign that his life would be prolonged fifteen years (Isaiah 38; 2 Kgs 20:1-11; 2 Chron 32:24-26)—he showed contempt for his God by allowing the Babylonian envoy to investigate the treasures of his house (Isaiah 39; 2 Kgs 20:12-19).

In Isaiah 10-35, the prophet urged Judah and her leaders to rely wholly on the Lord during the crisis in the north. The Lord’s answer to Hezekiah’s prayer (Isa 37:21-35) provides a point of synthesis for Isaiah 1-39 and proves informative for the storyline of Scripture. The Lord’s motive for rescuing Judah was that He had a plan to redeem a people for His glory. “This is the LORD’s declaration,” Isaiah proclaimed, “I will defend this city and rescue it, because of Me and because of My servant David” (Isa 37:35). But this deliverance was temporary. Because of Hezekiah’s folly before the envoy from Babylon and Judah’s continual idolatrous practices, within two generations Nebuchadnezzar marched into Jerusalem and destroyed the city (2 Kgs 25:1-21; 2 Chron 36:15-21). Hezekiah and Jerusalem would be rescued from Assyria, but not from the Lord. As the prophet had predicted, the Lord would raise up a nation to discipline His people for their idolatrous ways (Isa 29:1-10). In the flow of redemptive history, it becomes clear that the ultimate significance of the city of David rests upon David’s greater son, Jesus Christ. In Christ, Jerusalem has an eternal significance. The author of Hebrews described Jerusalem as the heavenly abode where the followers of Jesus assemble with Him and the angels in a festive gathering (Heb 12:22-24). There, John wrote, God’s people will be in the Lord’s presence forever (Revelation 21).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

In Isaiah 29-30, the prophet chided the leaders of the day for not hastening to the Lord’s invitation for deliverance from Assyria. In Isaiah 32-35, Isaiah presented the Lord as the true King of His people. The prophet hoped to convince Judah that while Ahaz had led them to trust in anyone but God, only as they relied upon the Lord would they enjoy righteousness and justice in the land. Isaiah elicited Judah’s trust in the Lord by presenting His plan to send a deliverer to rescue them.

Isaiah prophesied that a messianic figure would come and reign in righteousness (Isa 32:1-8). Isaiah predicted the edifying results of the Messiah’s reign: “Then the eyes of those who see will not be closed, and the ears of those who hear will listen. The reckless mind will gain knowledge, and the stammering tongue will speak clearly and fluently” (Isa 32:3-4). Isaiah portrayed Judah as helpless without the Messiah’s aid (Isa 33:1-16). Isaiah’s words here were prompted by Sennacherib’s initial invasion toward Jerusalem, when Hezekiah gave the Assyrian king all the silver in the Lord’s temple (2 Kgs 18:13-18). In distress, Isaiah cried, “LORD, be gracious to us! We wait for You. Be our strength every morning, and our salvation in time of trouble. The peoples flee at the thunderous noise; the nations scatter when You rise in Your majesty” (Isa 33:2-3). The Lord would indeed rise up and exalt Himself over the Assyrian king. The people dwelling in Jerusalem were thus exhorted to reform their lives in righteousness that they may dwell there and not be destroyed by the Lord, even if they escaped Sennacherib’s advance (Isa 33:14-16). The Messiah would one day rule over a city characterized by peace (Isa 33:17-24).

Isaiah prophesied that the Messiah’s coming would be consistent with judgment on the nations, especially Edom (Isaiah 34). Edom would be set apart as a representative target of God’s wrath “for its hostility against Zion” (Isa 34:8; Genesis 25; Numbers 20). The Spirit of God would gather wild animals in the place where Edomites once appointed their king (Isa 34:8-17). However, the ransomed of the Lord would return to Zion (Isaiah 35). Isaiah prophesied that gladness, joy, splendor, strength, sight, singing, and rain would come upon that which was parched, mute, blind, weak, destroyed, weeping, and mourning—because “God’s retribution is coming; He will save you” (Isa 35:4).

Isaiah’s sermon to the people of Jerusalem—perhaps surrounded by the forces of the Assyrian king Sennacherib—provided the initial setting for multiple messianic prophecies, a springboard for the storyline of Scripture. Many in Jesus’ day, however, misunderstood some of the specifics of Isaiah’s oracles. They questioned if Jesus was in fact the Messiah. While Jesus had accomplished some of the things Isaiah prophesied, Israel was still subject to Roman rule. Would not the Messiah execute judgment on the nations, as well as deliver the blind, mute, and lame? This was the question on the mind of John the Baptist when he was imprisoned by Herod Antipas. The Gentiles in the northern region of Galilee were enjoying the inauguration of the Messiah’s rule—as evidenced by the fact that the blind were made to see, the lame were made to walk, those with skin disease were healed, the deaf were able to hear, the dead were raised, and the poor were told the good news. At this time, the great John the Baptist was held captive by Israel’s enemy, Herod Antipas. “Isn’t the Messiah to come with blessing and vengeance?” he thought.

John’s paradigm, like that of many in his day, was highly influenced by Isaiah’s prophecy: “Say to the faint-hearted: ‘Be strong; do not fear! Here is your God; vengeance is coming. God’s retribution is coming; He will save you.’ Then the eyes of the blind will be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then the lame will leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute will sing for joy” (Isa 35:4-6a). When John thus sent messengers to Jesus to ask if He was in fact the Messiah (Matt 11:1-3//Luke 7:18-20), Jesus spoke not only of the miraculous blessings that He had bestowed on the needy but also affirmed John’s place in the redemptive-historical plan of God. By emphasizing that John was in fact the forerunner, Jesus affirmed that He was in fact the Messiah.

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

The thrust of Isaiah 28-31 is that Judah should trust in the Lord alone during the Assyrian threat. Isaiah described God’s sovereignty over the nations in hopes that Judah would cast herself at the Lord’s feet and receive grace to endure advances first by Tigleth-pileser (2 Kgs 16:7-9), then Shalmaneser V (2 Kings 17-18), and finally Sennacherib (2 Kings 18-19). Isaiah’s sharp tone in Isaiah 28-31 may have been prompted by King Ahaz’s earlier alliance with Tigleth-pileser (Isaiah 7). In the day of crisis, would Judah run to a neighbor, like Egypt—whom Isaiah had predicted would be destroyed (Isaiah 20)—or would they take refuge in the Lord (Isaiah 26)?

Several New Testament authors saw in the prophet’s oracles phrases that could be used to persuade their audience(s) to trust in the fuller demonstration of God’s faithfulness, Jesus Christ. Thus, Isaiah 28-31 has significance for the storyline of Scripture.

(1) In Isa 28:14-22 the prophet confronted Judah, perhaps specifically Ahaz, for making a pact with Death rather than relying on the Lord for deliverance. All the while, the Lord promised, “Look, I have laid a stone in Zion, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone, a sure foundation; the one who believes will be unshakable” (Isa 28:16). The authors of the New Testament understood Jesus Christ to represent the stone of Isa 28:16 (see Ps 118:22). Paul saw in Isaiah’s phrase a description of Israel in his own day; they too failed to rely upon the Lord’s offer of righteousness by faith in Christ. Concerning Israel, Paul wrote, “They stumbled over the stumbling stone. As it is written, ‘Look! I am putting a stone in Zion to stumble over, and a rock to trip over, yet the one who believes on Him will not be put to shame’” (Rom 9:33). Peter on the other hand understood Isaiah’s prophecy of the faithfulness of God to be a means of encouragement for the Gentile believers in his audience. Peter wrote, “Coming to Him, a living stone—rejected by men but chosen and valuable to God—you yourselves, as living stones, are being built into a spiritual house for a holy priesthood to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ” (1 Pet 2:4-5).

(2) In Isa 29:13, the prophet warned the people of their hypocrisy. They went through the motions of temple service while considering surrendering to the Assyrians or seeking an alliance with Egypt. Jesus saw in the words of the prophet an apt description of the hypocritical Jewish leadership of His own day, those who put their traditions—like giving extra to the temple instead of using their surplus to take care of their aging parents—above God’s word or submission to His lordship. Like Isaiah’s audience, Jesus’ opponents honored God with their lips but their hearts were far from God (Matt 15:8-9//Mark 7:6-7).

(3) In Isa 29:14, Isaiah said that the Lord would confound the wisdom of the wise in Judah, those who thought it best to make a pact with Assyria or Egypt to preserve their national identity. Paul saw in Isaiah’s statement a warning for the Corinthians—who themselves were guilty of seeking significance and security in worldly alliances rather than the foolish message of the cross. Paul wrote, “To those who are perishing the message of the cross is foolishness, but to us who are being saved it is God’s power. For it is written, ‘I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and I will set aside the understanding of the experts’” (1 Cor 1:18-19).

(4) In Isa 29:16, the prophet rebuked those who questioned God’s faithfulness to His people. Many in Judah thought they were smarter than God, able to inform the Lord that it would be a better plan to surrender to Assyria or make a pact with Egypt than be defeated by Assyria. They regarded themselves as the potter and God as the clay. Paul saw in Israel’s rebellious attitude a picture of those who questioned God’s faithfulness to national Israel. Some wondered why so many Jews were rejecting the Messiah with the result that the church was dominated by Gentiles. Paul answered their quandary by setting forth the sovereignty of God to call whom He would. To the haughty interlocutor who asked, “Why then does He still find fault? For who can resist His will?” Paul replied, “Will what is formed say to the one who formed it, ‘Why did you make me like this?’ Or has the potter no right over His clay, to make from the same lump one piece of pottery for honor and another for dishonor?” (Rom 9:19-21).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

Isaiah wanted his audience to understand that God is exalted over the nations. Isaiah prophesied that God would execute destruction on the present world structure in favor of a new, God-centered government on earth. Isaiah’s words of destruction and subsequent restoration provided Judah with a theological vision for enduring the Assyrian threat. Specifically, the question in Isa 27:7 (“Did the LORD strike Israel as He struck the one who struck Israel? Was he killed like those killed by Him?”) proves helpful in the broader interpretation of Isaiah 24-27. This question may have been intended to foster hope among Isaiah’s audience. While the Lord had extended His wrath over Israel, and Judah would eventually experience the same, He yet promised them a future. Their opponents, however, were given no such hope.

Isaiah’s prophecies concerning God’s victory and the salvation of His people provided comfort and encouragement to the remnant during the reigns of Ahaz (2 Kings 16; 2 Chronicles 28) and Hezekiah (2 Kings 18-20; 2 Chronicles 29-32). In the storyline of Scripture, the New Testament writers understood Isaiah’s description of hope to have implications for their day as well. For instance, the vineyard metaphor in Isa 5:1-7 informs and parallels Jesus’ Parable of the Vineyard Owner (Matt 21:33-43//Mk 12:1-12//Luke 20:9-19)—in which Israel was pictured as fruitless and worthy of condemnation. When Isaiah employed the metaphor again in Isa 27:2-13, he concluded with words of hope. “On that day,” Isaiah said, “a great trumpet will be blown, and those lost in the land of Assyria will come, as well as those dispersed in the land of Egypt; and they will worship the LORD at Jerusalem on the holy mountain” (Isa 27:13).

While on the surface Isaiah’s emphasis on hope may prove surprising to the reader, it coheres more closely with the general tone of Isaiah 24-27 than would another picture of barrenness. Here the prophet detailed the destruction of Israel’s enemies, and the restoration and praise that would follow for God’s people. The themes of redemption and triumph in Isaiah 24-27 provide a framework for the apostle John’s concluding vision in Revelation.

(1) In Isa 25:6-10, the prophet used the metaphor of a great banquet to describe the restoration of an international remnant. Isaiah said, “The LORD of Hosts will prepare a feast for all the peoples on this mountain…He will destroy death forever. The Lord GOD will wipe away the tears from every face and remove His people’s disgrace from the whole earth, for the LORD has spoken” (Isa 25:6, 8). This scene may have provided the background for John’s visions in Revelation 19-21. John’s description of the Marriage Feast of the Lamb (Rev 19:6-8) employs imagery from Isa 25:6-10. Further, John’s vision of the New Jerusalem—where God would dwell with His people, wiping away tears and death and pain (Rev 21:3-4)—rests squarely on Isaiah’s prophecy.

(2) In Isa 24:17-23, the prophet described the destruction that would come upon the wicked, “the host of heaven above and kings of the earth below” (Isa 24:21), and announced that the remnant would enjoy the glorious presence of the Lord. This schema was repeated in Revelation 19-21, where John witnessed that the destruction of those who opposed the people of the Messiah preceded the unending fellowship the redeemed would enjoy with God. Using imagery from Isa 24:23, John wrote, “I did not see a sanctuary in it [the New Jerusalem], because the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb are its sanctuary. The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, because God’s glory illuminates it, and its lamp is the Lamb” (Rev 21:22-23).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

Isaiah’s pronouncements of judgement in Isaiah 13-23 underscore God’s jealousy for the trust of His people. God yearns for them to expect that He will deliver, even to the degree that they forsake all others and trust in Him alone. In the midst of international threats, Israel and Judah were tempted to make an alliance with the surrounding nations. Isaiah’s speeches were intended to persuade Israel and Judah to rely upon only their God for deliverance. Isaiah’s speeches also censured the nations from boasting over the vineyard of the Lord—since the nations invading Israel and Judah were merely instruments of the Lord’s wrath against His people. In the storyline of Scripture, Isaiah’s oracles in Isaiah 13-23 form a schema for understanding judgment and redemption.

(1) John’s description of the destruction of Babylon reflected Isaiah’s prophecies of Babylon’s demise. Isaiah prophesied that Babylon would be swept away, destroyed by the Medes (Isa 13:17-22). The king of Babylon would be thrown down (Isa 14:3-22), Isaiah said. He exhorted his listeners to take note of the day when Babylon would be destroyed (Isa 21:1-10; Jeremiah 50-51) and flee the temptation to trust in any but the Lord of Hosts. John understood the words of Isaiah to have implications for the consummation of the ages. In Revelation 17-19, John recorded his vision of the destruction of Babylon, concluding with the description of Christ’s victorious return. Then those who boasted over God’s people would finally be destroyed (Rev 19:17-21) and a new creation would be established (Revelation 21-22).

(2) Jesus too saw in Isaiah’s prophecy an apt description of the kind of events that would take place before His return. During His passion week in Jerusalem, one of His disciples was exiting the temple with Him and commented to Jesus about the massive stones used to build such an impressive structure (Mark 13:1//Matt 24:1//Luke 21:5). When Jesus replied that the temple would be destroyed, some of His disciples asked Jesus for specifics of when the temple would be destroyed and what circumstances would incite such a cataclysm (Mark 13:4//Matt 24:3//Luke 21:7). Jesus urged His disciples to beware of whom they trusted. Many false prophets would arise, Jesus said, offering security during the coming tribulation. Jesus then turned to the words of Isa 13:10 where the prophet said, “The stars of the sky and its constellations will not give their light. The sun will be dark when it rises, and the moon will not shine.” These alterations in the natural phenomena (Mark 13:24//Matt 24:29//Luke 21:26) are not an end in themselves, Jesus said. These would reveal the coming of the Son of Man in His power and dominion. Jesus described the day of the Son of Man not only in terms of judgement but also in terms of redemption, when the angels would be sent out to gather the elect from around the world (Mark 13:27//Matt 24:31).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament

Much of Isaiah’s prophecy is a contrast of two of Judah’s kings, Ahaz and his son Hezekiah. Both faced external threats, Ahaz from Aram, Israel, and Assyria (2 Kings 16; 2 Chronicles 28) and Hezekiah, likewise, from Assyria. The Lord, through Isaiah, invited both leaders to trust Him for their deliverance. Ahaz sought security in his enemy, who “attacked him and took many captives to Damascus” (2 Chron 28:5). Isaiah predicted that Assyria would in fact destroy Judah, with only a remnant surviving in the land. In the storyline of Scripture, Isaiah’s prophecies in Isaiah 7-12 establish a frame for understanding the Messiah.

(1) The Messiah would be born of a virgin. To King Ahaz, the prophet said, “The Lord Himself will give you a sign: The virgin will conceive, have a son, and name him Immanuel” (Isa 7:14)—a prediction that was fulfilled in the birth of Christ (Matt 1:23; Luke 1:31).

(2) The Messiah would have divine character and righteousness would characterize His rule. Isaiah announced not only the destruction of Judah—with the salvation of only a remnant, but also a time when the Lord’s favor would be extended directly to the Gentiles (Isa 9:1-3). Matthew said this was fulfilled in Jesus’ early Galilean ministry (Matt 4:15-16). During which time Jesus preached, “Repent, because the kingdom of heaven has come near!” (Matt 4:17). Isaiah predicted that the virgin’s child would grow to become a great ruler, saying, “The government will be on His shoulders. He will be named Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace. The dominion will be vast and its prosperity will never end.  He will reign on the throne of David and over his kingdom” (Isa 9:6-7a). The angel Gabriel quoted this prophecy to comfort Mary in her role as the one who would give birth to the Messiah (Luke 1:32-33). Luke notes that as an adolescent, Jesus “grew up and became strong, filled with wisdom, and God’s grace was on Him” (Luke 2:40), resembling Isaiah’s prophecy of the Messiah: “The Spirit of the LORD will rest on Him—a Spirit of wisdom and understanding, a Spirit of counsel and strength, a Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD” (Isa 11:2). Isaiah announced that Jesus’ latter ministry would be characterized by righteous judgment: “He will judge the poor righteously and execute justice for the oppressed of the land. He will strike the land with discipline from His mouth, and He will kill the wicked with a command from His lips” (Isa 11:4). This schema is reflected in John’s description of the return of Christ in Rev 19:15, “From His mouth came a sharp sword, so that with it He might strike the nations. He will shepherd them with an iron scepter. He will also trample the winepress of the fierce anger of God, the Almighty.”

(3) The Messiah would identify fully with His people, a group that would include Gentiles. While Ahaz and many of the nobility in Judah aligned themselves with Assyria, Isaiah and his companions, who together composed a faithful remnant, resolved to trust only in the Lord. The prophet confessed, “I will wait for the LORD, who is hiding His face from the house of Jacob. I will wait for Him. Here I am with the children the LORD has given me to be signs and wonders in Israel from the LORD of Hosts who dwells on Mount Zion” (Isa 8:16-18). The author of Hebrews saw in Isaiah’s companionship with his children (the prophets under his care) an illustration of Christ’s identification with humanity; together they formed a faithful remnant that endured suffering and rejection and victory (Heb 2:1-13). Isaiah prophesied, “No one will harm or destroy on My entire holy mountain, for the land will be as full of the knowledge of the LORD as the sea is filled with water. On that day, the root of Jesse will stand as a banner for the peoples. The nations will seek Him, and His resting place will be glorious” (Isa 11:9-10). The apostle Paul saw in Isaiah’s words justification for Jews to accept the Gentile believers among them (Rom 15:12).

Commentary Isaiah Major Prophets Old Testament