Bible Commentary

Isaiah 43:8-13

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8-13

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The great controversy.

The challenge of . is renewed, and Jehovah's claims are contrasted with those of the false gods.

I. ASSEMBLING OF THE NATIONS. Israel is first brought forth by the ministers of justice. The people were once blind and deaf, but now are in possession of their faculties. And then, over against this small company of the faithful, the vast host of the heathen appears. And the challenge is issued—What god of the nations can produce predictions such as those in ? If this can be done, let them name former things—appeal to past events correctly foretold, and establish this by testimony. But the appeal is met by silence, by impotence. There are no witnesses forthcoming. And so once more idol-power is convicted and exposed as being "nothing in the world."

II. THE WITNESS TO JEHOVAH Israel is now called upon. She has known again and again the power of Jehovah to foresee and foretell the future. Let their faith, then, be wholly given to him—a faith founded on evidence, a faith rooted in intelligence. This faith cleaves to Jehovah as the Eternal. He is both before and after all created things. These idols have been the objects of an illusory worship—formed and fashioned things. Their power breaks with the decay of the nations of whom they have been the imagined patrons. In the hour of adversity they have seemed, like Baal, asleep or gone on a journey—have lifted no arm to save. Jehovah remains the sole able God, the exclusive Deliverer. No "stranger," no foreign God had power for good or evil in Israel. To this test of ability to meet the wants of the times, true and false religions must ultimately be brought. The doctrine or the institution which visibly is saving men from evil, emancipating them from bondage to vice, must have a Divine element in it. And Christianity seems to need no other apology than the witness of what it has done and is doing to purify, save, and bless mankind.

III. His IRREVERSIBLE WORK. "I work, and who can turn it back?" Messengers of his vengeance have been sent to Babylonia, and all the mixed multitude will be brought down into their proud ships, hopelessly overwhelmed. The great deliverance from Egypt—eternally monumental of Jehovah's power to deliver—shall itself be surpassed by the coming deliverance of Israel from the recesses of the earth. It is seen already "shooting forth," and a blissful picture of the future, peaceful, abundant, victorious over savagery, closes the representation.

1. God is Eternal.

2. He is unchangeably the same. And this is the sure foundation of the security of his people. None can trust a fickle and a vacillating being.

3. He can deliver his people from all enemies, amidst every variety of circumstances.

4. None—whether man, demon, or god—can resist him. Opposition to him is both wicked and vain. The condition of happiness is to comply with his plans, and become servants in the furtherance of his designs.—J.

Recommended reading

More for Isaiah 43:8-13

Continue with other commentaries and DiscipleDeck content connected to this verse, chapter, or topic.

Other commentaries

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:1-28Isaiah 43:1-28 · The Pulpit CommentaryEXPOSITIONMatthew Henry on Isaiah 43:8-13Isaiah 43:8-13 · Matthew Henry Concise CommentaryIdolaters are called to appear in defence of their idols. Those who make them, and trust in them, are like unto them. They have the shape and faculties of men; but they have not common sense. But God's people know the p…A Challenge to Idolaters. (b. c. 708.)Isaiah 43:8-13 · Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole BibleA CHALLENGE TO IDOLATERS. (B. C. 708.) God here challenges the worshippers of idols to produce such proofs of the divinity of their false gods as even this very instance (to go no further) of the redemption of the Jews…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8-13Isaiah 43:8-13 · The Pulpit CommentaryA RENEWED CHALLENGE TO THE NATIONS. The nations are once more challenged (comp. Isaiah 41:1, Isaiah 41:21-26) to set forth the claims of their gods against those of Jehovah. Israel is summoned on the one hand (Isaiah 43…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8Isaiah 43:8 · The Pulpit CommentaryBring forth the blind people that have eyes. A tribunal is supposed to have been prepared, before which the contending parties are summoned to appear and plead. Israel is first summoned, as "a blind people that have eye…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8-11Isaiah 43:8-11 · The Pulpit CommentaryWitnesses for God and against him. On the side of God, witnesses for him, assertors of his existence, his unity, his omnipotence, his providential direction of human affairs, are— II. HIS CHURCH IN ALL AGES, WHETHER JEW…
commentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:1-28EXPOSITIONJoseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryMatthew Henry on Isaiah 43:8-13Idolaters are called to appear in defence of their idols. Those who make them, and trust in them, are like unto them. They have the shape and faculties of men; but they have not common sense. But God's people know the p…Matthew HenrycommentaryA Challenge to Idolaters. (b. c. 708.)A CHALLENGE TO IDOLATERS. (B. C. 708.) God here challenges the worshippers of idols to produce such proofs of the divinity of their false gods as even this very instance (to go no further) of the redemption of the Jews…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8-11Witnesses for God and against him. On the side of God, witnesses for him, assertors of his existence, his unity, his omnipotence, his providential direction of human affairs, are— II. HIS CHURCH IN ALL AGES, WHETHER JEW…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8-13A RENEWED CHALLENGE TO THE NATIONS. The nations are once more challenged (comp. Isaiah 41:1, Isaiah 41:21-26) to set forth the claims of their gods against those of Jehovah. Israel is summoned on the one hand (Isaiah 43…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:8Bring forth the blind people that have eyes. A tribunal is supposed to have been prepared, before which the contending parties are summoned to appear and plead. Israel is first summoned, as "a blind people that have eye…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:9All the nations; rather, all ye nations. Israel is a witness on the one hand, a multitude of nations on the other, recalling the contention of Elijah with the four hundred priests of Baal (1 Kings 18:22). The people; ra…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 43:10The witness of God's servants. "Ye are my witnesses." God summoned his people Israel to bear witness to him; he challenged them to come forward and testify that I. THOSE WHO ARE TO BEAR IT. We know who they are to whom…Joseph S. Exell and contributors