Bible Commentary

Isaiah 55:3

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 55:3

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

Come unto me (comp. , "Come ye to the waters"). God dispenses the waters (see ). I will make an everlasting covenant with you. That the "everlasting covenant" once made between God and man had been broken by man, and by Israel especially, is a part of the teaching contained in the earlier portion of Isaiah ().

We find the same asserted in the prophecies of his contemporary, Hosea (). It would naturally follow from this that, unless God gave up man altogether, he would enter into a new covenant with him.

Accordingly, this new covenant is announced, both in Hosea () and in the later chapters of Isaiah, repeatedly (; ; ; ; , ; :21; ).

Having been thus set before the nation, it is further enlarged upon by Jeremiah (; ; ) and Ezekiel (; ; ). Almost all commentators allow that the Christian covenant is intended—that "new covenant" () under which man obtains pardon and salvation through the Mediatorship of Christ.

Even the sure mercies of David. The "sure mercies of David" are the loving and merciful promises which God made to him. These included the promise that the Messiah should come of his seed, and sit on his throne, and establish an everlasting kingdom (, ), and triumph over death and hell (, ), and give peace and happiness to Israel ().

The promises made to David, rightly understood, involve all the essential points of the Christian covenant.

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