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Introduction Chapter 1 Chapters 2 to 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapters 7 to 9 Chapters 9:8 to 12 Chapters 13 and 14 Chapters 15 to 18 Chapters 19 to 23 Chapter 24 Chapters 25 and 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapters 33 and 34 Chapter 35 Chapters 36 to 39 Chapter 40 Chapters 41 to 43 Chapters 44 and 45 Chapters 46 to 48 Chapter 49 Chapter 50 Chapters 51 and 52 Chapter 53 Chapter 54 Chapters 55 to 57 Chapters 58 and 59 Chapter 60 Chapters 61 and 62 Chapter 63 Chapters 64 and 65 Chapter 66 |
Jehovah's judgment and its resultIsaiah 63:1-6. We find again here the terrible judgment of chapter 34 executed by Jehovah (or rather having been already executed, for He returns from it). The result is the peace and blessing which we have just seen described in chapter 62. The plea of the afflicted trusting remnant
From verse 7 of chapter 63 we have the reasoning of the Spirit of
prophecy in the mouth of the remnant, or perhaps that of the prophet,
putting himself in that position. And in Isaiah 65, 66 we find
Jehovah's answer. Nothing can be more affecting than the way in which
the Spirit lends Himself to the expression of all the feelings of a
faithful Israelite's heart; or rather in which He gives a form to the
sentiments of an afflicted but trusting heart, recalling past
kindnesses, overwhelmed by the present distress, acknowledging the
hardheartedness and rebellion of which they had been guilty, but
appealing to the unchangeable faithfulness of God's love against the
judicial blinding and hardening which the people are under. If Abraham
acknowledged them not, God was their Father. Where was His strength,
His tenderness. His mercies? Were they restrained? Faith recognises
through all things the link between the people and God; it
acknowledges that God prepares for those that wait on Him things
beyond man's conception* — that He meets those who walk uprightly;
and it confesses that the state of Israel is quite different — that
they are sinners, not even seeking His face. But the affliction of His
people, the disastrous condition into which sin had brought them, is
to faith a plea with God. Whatever had happened, the people were to
faith as the clay, and Jehovah the potter. They were His people;
their cities, the cities of Jehovah. The house in which their fathers
had worshipped was burnt up, and all was laid waste. |
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