Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 42:16
And I will bring the blind by a way [that] they knew not; I will lead them in paths [that] they have not known: I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them.
16. The prophet hastens on to the gracious issue of God’s interposition, the homebringing of the captives through the trackless desert.
the blind here are hardly the spiritually blind, those who cannot discern God’s purpose (as Isa 42:18); what is meant is that the travellers cannot see their path, just as the desert is the region of “darkness” because it has no track (cf. Jer 2:6; Jer 2:31). For knew and have known, render know, with R.V.
crooked things straight ] crooked places a plain (cf. ch. Isa 40:4).
these things forsake them ] Better: These are the things I have determined to do (perf. of resolution) and not leave undone.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And I will lead the blind – Having said in the previous verses what he would do to his enemies, God now speaks of his people. He would conduct them to their own land, as a blind people that needed a guide, and would remove whatever obstacle there was in their way. By the blind here, he refers doubtless to his own people. The term is applied originally to his people in captivity, as being ignorant, after their seventy years exile, of the way of return to their own land. It is possible that it may have a reference to the fact, so often charged on them, that they were characteristically a stupid and spiritually blind people. But it is more probable that it is the language of tenderness rather than that of objurgation; and denotes their ignorance of the way of return, and their need of a guide, rather than their guilt, and hardness of heart. If applied to the people of God under the New Testament – as the entire strain of the prophecy seems to lead ns to conclude – then it denotes that Christians will feel their need of a leader, counselor, and guide; and that Yahweh, as a military leader, will conduct them all in a way which they did not know, and remove all obstacles from their path.
By a way that they knew not – When they were ignorant what course to take; or in a path which they did not contemplate or design. It is true of all the friends of God that they have been led in a way which they knew not. They did not mark out this course for themselves; they did not at first form the plans of life which they came ultimately to pursue; they have been led, by the providence of God, in a different path, and by the Spirit of God they have been inclined to a course which they themselves would never have chosen (compare the note at Isa 30:21).
I will make darkness light before them – Darkness, in the Scriptures, is the emblem of ignorance, sin, adversity, and calamity. Here it seems to be the emblem of adverse and opposing events; of calamities, persecutions, and trials. The meaning is, that God would make those events which seemed to be adverse and calamitous, the means of furthering his cause, and promoting the spirit of the true religion, and the happiness of his people. This has been eminently the case with the persecutions which rite church has endured. The events which have been apparently most adverse, have been ultimately overruled to the best interests of the true religion. Such was the case with the persecutions under the Roman emperors, and in general such has been the case in all the persecutions which the church has been called to suffer.
And crooked things straight – Things which seem to be adverse and opposing – the persecutions and trials which the people of God would be called to endure.
And not forsake them – (See Isa 41:10, note, Isa 41:13, note).
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Isa 42:16
And I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not
God leading the blind
The blind are they whom transgression and wickedness have robbed of power of spiritual insight.
The unknown ways in which Jehovah leads them are the ways of redemption, known to Him alone and now revealed in the fulness of times. (F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
The unknown path
God would lead Israel by a way that had not yet been trodden; He would redeem her from Babylon, not as He delivered her from Egypt in the distant past, but by inclining towards her the heart of her captor.
I. THE UNKNOWN, UNTRODDEN PATH BEFORE US.
1. It is an unknown path which we are about to tread. Let the child or even the young man draw an outline of his anticipated career, and let that line he compared with the one which really marks his course; what a divergence will there be l
2. It is an untrodden path. As the second great Divine deliverance of Israel differed materially from the first, so Gods dealings with individual men differ with the several periods of their life.
II. THE GUIDANCE OF OUR GOD. I will bring. I will lead. There are two ways by which God leads His people.
1. By controlling their circumstances. God may preserve us from taking the wrong path by providentially blocking the way in which we might otherwise have walked; or, He may keep us from a false movement, or induce us to make the true one by bringing us unto the fellowship of some wise friend whose timely counsel either dissuades or determines us.
2. By influencing their minds. He is nearer to us than our nearest friends; and He can influence us more powerfully than the wisest and strongest of our teachers or guardians.
III. HIS DISPOSITION AND FREEDOM TO HELP US.
1. That God is disposed to help us, we need not doubt.
(1) His sovereignty over Israel would account for all His watchfulness over that people; and His Fatherhood of every human spirit will certainly ensure His Divine interest in each one of His children. And if this were an insufficient bond to constrain such condescending notice, we have but to remember that Jesus Christ is the Divine Saviour and Friend of every one of His people, most tenderly united to each of them by the strongest ties. The Good Shepherd cares, and cares much, for every sheep of His flock.
(2) Our Lords intimation of the Fathers care for all His creatures, and His own a fortiori argument therefrom (Ye are of more value than many sparrows) is convincing proof to all Christian minds that our God is thinking upon us, that He is mindful of our necessities, and is shaping our course from day to day.
2. That God is free to help us, we may also be assured. Nothing is more incredible than that the Father of spirits, the Saviour of souls, should, by the established order of nature which He has constructed, have to cut Himself off from His human family that, however earnestly they cried to Him, He would not be at liberty to respond to them. That He should not weaken our sense of the imperative claims of duty and diligence by too obviously and constantly interposing on our behalf, we can readily understand. It is but necessary that He should touch some link in the chain of causes which is out of our sight; thus, with unseen but unfettered hand, He works on our behalf.
IV. OUR DUTY AND OUR COMFORT.
1. Our duty is threefold.
(1) To become His children indeed, in the very fullest sense, by living faith in Jesus Christ.
(2) To live before God as His obedient children, that our service and submission may win His Fatherly delight and His parental longing to bless us.
(3) To ask for His constant guidance in daily prayer.
2. Our comfort is great indeed. God will be our guide. He will be our vanguard, and be our rereward (Isa 52:12). (The Thinker.)
God the Guide of His blind people
True wisdom will confirm the decision of Scripture, not only as to spiritual things but as to all things, when it says, If any man thinketh that he knoweth anything, i.e if he regard himself as perfect in knowledge, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know. If we look to our own path in life, we find ourselves uninformed concerning that which lies before us. But the Word of God does not more explicitly reveal to us our ignorance and blindness, than it offers to us a great and infallible Guide. Let our minds be directed to the inquiry, whether or no this promise is verified in the experience of Gods people.
I. In answer to this question we first reply that such a guidance may be traced in the dealings of God with His children BY HIS PROVIDENCE. A historian of the Reformation has placed in the forefront of his immortal work this sentence respecting it: This history takes as its guiding star the simple and pregnant truth that God is in history (DAubigne). And that single sentence contains a world of important truth. The recorded history of the Jewish nation affords a beautiful illustration of the truth that God is active in all human affairs. And had God inspired another prophet to write the history of any other nation, yea, had God inspired a prophet to write your individual history, or my own, we should be astonished to see how busy the hand of God had been in its every stage and turn.
II. God leads His children by a way they know not IN THE DEALINGS OF HIS GRACE, e.g., the woman of Samaria; the assembly which stood before Peter on the Day of Pentecost; the blaspheming, persecuting Saul; the jailer at Philippi. God is characteristically a God who is found of them that sought Him not. The Divine methods for leading the believer to growth in grace are not less unexpected. Even on the believers deathbed is often and gloriously illustrated the teaching of our text. As the path by which God leads His people is, in its beginning, and in all its progress, so is it in its termination, one which they know not. It doth not yet appear what we shall be. (W. E. Schenck.)
Divine guidance
1. In Scripture the word blind is used respecting the prejudiced and the proud. Their minds are perverted. The Pharisees could see no beauty in Christ, no excellence in His teaching, no evidence of Divine mission in His works. They were blind leaders of the blind. It is employed also to denote the characteristic dulness and stupidity of the Israelites, as a people, perpetually lapsing into idolatry, breaking off from God, unable to see the blessedness of the path of truth and righteousness.
2. But there is still another meaning that is important. The word may mean simple ignorance. It may describe one who cannot see the right path because there is a mist upon it, and he is perplexed on account of this. There may be tenderness in the word rather than anger; gentle purposes of love implied rather than condemnation or rebuke. This helps us to understand the passage. The way of providence and grace in the darkness and perplexity of life may be thus graphically and forcibly expressed.
I. We have the frequent MYSTERY of God in providence and grace. We know not, and cannot trace, the way of God. The material, the vegetable, the animal, worlds are full of what is inscrutable. Thus it is with the course of individual life. We pursue our path, not knowing what may arise. We go forth like Abraham, not knowing whither we go. Yet there is an eye that sees all, a mind that directs an, a hand that overrules all. We believe that every man lives in the Divine thought. Each has his separate course, duties, and responsibilities, from which he can no more escape than his shadow. Every one, like John, is called to fulfil this course. And God knows all. But to us, life has to discover itself as we go on, and often passages in it, and the end, look strange as compared with the beginning. We purpose one thing but God means another, e.g. Joseph, Elisha, Amos, Win. Carey, etc. So also as to grace. The leadings of God to fulfil His purposes are leadings of the blind. The methods He takes to enlighten the mind have infinite variety. While unconsciously men pursue a path they think their own, lo! it leads them within the circle of Divine influences which they never anticipated. Who would have thought that the vehement persecutor who stood by while the stones crashed down on Stephen, before he entered Damascus on his further errand of malice, would be met and subdued by all-conquering mercy? Who could have predicted that Lydia, of Thyatira, in pursuit of her business at Philippi, would find her heart opened to receive the truth, and be led to rejoice in far greater riches than the most prosperous trade could bring? What a surprise to Philemon that his runaway slave, who had played the thief, should be blessed under the apostles ministry at Rome! Little did Francis Xavier think, when he entered the college of St. Barbs a gay and haughty youth, that one whom he scorned and despised would be the means of his conversion, and that the text, What shall it profit a man? so frequently repeated, would be the arrow of the Almighty to his soul. Little did West, the sceptical lawyer, think, when he sat down to tear in pieces, as he purposed, the arguments that prove the resurrection of Christ, that he would end in owning their unanswerableness, and his own spirit should bow before God. As little did another conceive that in attempting to hold up in caricature and contempt the apostle Paul, the spiritual power and greatness he beheld should lead him to become a disciple too. Passing words, casual association, incidental events, have had wonderful spiritual results. Men have regretted circumstances that have yet been made instrumental to their conversion. A young man has wept to lose a situation, but unwittingly has been led to another, where Divine grace has made him a new creature. God works invisibly; His instrumentalities and agencies we often fall to recognise; but they are mighty to fulfil the counsels of His will, and thus He brings the blind by a way they know not.
II. The KINDNESS as well as mystery of the Divine method is taught us in this passage. Probably, at some time, occasion has prompted you to guide for a few steps a blind man. He has wished to cross the road, and there is peril; or, groping his way along, there is some object which, unless he avoids it, will cause injury. The human tenderness that is in you has led you to be kind and true. But if such a spirit animates an imperfect man, shall we not take the Scripture assurance that the spirit of kindness characterises the infinite God, whose name is announced as Love T
1. The Divine guidance is kind because it is wise. Our God is of infinite counsel He knows our nature, tendencies, capacities, impulses, the action and influence of everything upon us. There are mountain passes, we are told, before traversing which the guides blindfold the travellers. They could not endure to see the awful precipices on either side. So it may be in some of the paths of life there are perils, and God guidance is an enigma, because He is dealing with us thus.
2. Gods guidance is kind because it is patient. He bears with our disobedience and ingratitude, puts up with our manifold affronts and defiance, suffers long with our infirmities, and still exerts new influences that His gentleness may prevail.
3. Gods guidance is kind because it is supporting. You have sometimes in country walks approached a hill It has seemed to rise with special steepness, but you have advanced, and strength has been equal, refreshing air and pleasant scenery have cheered. You have threaded your way through some intricate route towards a house or village, and thought you would never find it; but a token here and a footstep there have encouraged, and your journeys end has been gained. So up lifes hills of difficulty and along its tortuous paths, a Divine hand leads and a Divine voice cheers.
III. The FAITHFULNESS Of the Divine guidance. Not forsake. You have sometimes seen, perhaps, standing on the pavement or in a passage some little crying child. A careless mother has left it for a while, little thinking of distress or danger. Every sentiment of pity within you is moved, as in its sobs it cannot tell either its name or home. You may be reassured- The mother will return soon. But if it were indeed abandoned to cold and misery, in the driving storm and falling snow, no heart so hard but must be deeply compassionate. But this would be surpassed by the thought of a Christian, forsaken, if we could so conceive. A child of God deserted, with promises broken, blessings withdrawn, hopes disappointed, cast off in caprice and weariness–the woe of such an one would rise to the very height of distress. But this can never be. He has pledged His word, and with Moses we should exclaim, What would become of Thy great name? The universe in ruins would be an appalling wreck. But this could be nothing compared with the wreck of the Divine character. Dr. Whewell has said, The whole earth from pole to pole, from centre to circumference, is employed in keeping a snowdrop in the position best suited for the promotion of its vegetable health. Doth God provide for the flower; and shall He not guard His people? (G. Macmichael, B. A.)
The way in which God leads His people
Our object will be to show that, from the beginning to the end of their pilgrimage, God leads His people in a way, which previous to experience they know not.
I. The true nature of CONVICTION OF SIN is a thing of which the called of God have no distinct knowledge, prior to experience. There is, no doubt, a great diversity in the exercises and circumstances of souls under conviction. Before this they may have formed a conception of the feelings of a convinced sinner. They imagined that by some flash, like lightning, conviction of sin would be effected. Very, commonly the awakened person strives to produce conviction of the kind conceived, by bringing up to view the most frightful images. But if the convinced sinner could realise all the feelings of which he has conceived, and for which he longs and prays, the end of conviction would not be at all answered; for the end of conviction is to lead the sinner out of himself; to destroy all self-confidence and self-complacency. But if he could experience such feelings as he wishes, he would think well of himself, as being in the frame in which he ought to be. The views and feelings produced by the conviction of the Spirit, lead the soul to despair–to despair of ever saving itself. It is an unexpected thing, of which the blind could form no practical conception, that the nearer the sinner approaches towards deliverance, the further he recedes from hope and comfort, in his own apprehension. That is found true, therefore, in spiritual things, which has been noticed in natural things; that the darkest hour is that which immediately precedes the dawning of the day.
II. CONVERSION also turns out in experience to be a very different thing from what was anticipated. Awakened sinners, having heard of persons being translated from darkness to the marvellous light of the Gospel, and having, perhaps, heard or read of some remarkable conversions, expect to be brought through the new birth in a way perfectly similar to these extraordinary cases, which, however, are very imperfectly understood. They, therefore, endeavour to place them selves in the same circumstances as those in which others were when they found peace with God; and they continue to look and wait for some sudden and almost miraculous change. These expectations are never realised, and are always erroneous; for when this blessed change actually occurs, the light is commonly like that of the dawn; obscure at first, but shining more and more to the perfect day; and instead of the views being miraculous or strange, they appear to rise in the mind like other thoughts and feelings. The only marked difference is, not in the manner of the views, but in the spiritual beauty and glory of the objects contemplated. The soul, under the leadings of the Spirit, is often brought near to Christ, when it apprehended He was far off.
III. God leads His once blind but chosen people in the way which they know not, as it relates to THE MEANS AND PROGRESS OF THEIR SANCTIFICATION.
IV. Another thing in the dispensations of God to His people which, prior to experience, they never distinctly understood, and which cannot easily be explained, is His leaving them for a season to back slide; and then RECOVERING THEM by the exercise of the same sovereign grace which first brought them into the path of life.
V. Finally, the people of God are often CONDUCTED THROUGH THE VALLEY AND SHADOW OF DEATH in an unexpected manner. (A. Alexander, D. D.)
The blind travellers
The experience of the Jews and the experience of Christians are so closely analogous that the one is used in Scripture as a type of the other.
I. THE CONDITION DESCRIBED.
1. The blindness of the traveller. Is the figure too strong to describe our case? You can look upon the past, and memory will throw her clear light on salient points of the journey. But when you turn round and try to explore the future, you are struck blind, you can see nothing! You cannot tell how long the journey is going to be, or how short; what heights, what depths, you may have to cross, or where they are.
2. The strangeness of the way. A way they knew not–paths they have not known. You once drew out a map of the course you intended to pursue–will you lay beside it the map of the course you have pursued? What a difference between programme and performance! And so it will be in the future–It is not in man that walketh to direct his steps.
3. The obstacles in the road. My text tells of crooked things and crooked places; how true to nature and experience!
II. THE CONSOLATION PRESENTED. Remember that it is addressed to Gods own people–in other words, to penitent sinners, to humble believers.
1. Here is a promise of the wisest guidance. Blind man, you dont know the way–but God does!
2. Here is a promise of the mightiest help. I will make darkness light before them, and crooked places straight.
3. Here is a promise of the firmest faithfulness.
III. THERE IS ANOTHER JOURNEY TO BE MADE. This is the journey to heaven itself–that more glorious Canaan than any that the Jews sighed,, for in their captivity m Babylon. But it is the land that is very far off–and how shall we find the way? Now this is not so easy as some would have us suppose; for here, too, we are blind travellers-and the way is strange–and there are terrible obstacles in the road. It is a mercy when we discover our condition, and cease trying to guide ourselves; and cry, Lord, we are blind–do Thou lead us! Lord, save us–or we perish! What provision has been made for us in the mercy of God? Christ–Who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life! Lay hold of Christ, blind traveller! and never for a moment relax your hold. Here is guidance, help, faithfulness, all-sufficient and unchanging. (F. Tucker, B. A.)
Guidance for the blind
I. THE CONDITION OF SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS. By the fall of our first parent, darkness hath come over the spirit of every man born into the world. In heathen nations and in heathen days, although there were some faint and feeble aspirings after truth, in the main men were in the depths of darkness. This is not merely the original condition of every man, but is in part the condition of the regenerate also. Yet there are things, unto which man, even at the most advanced of his earthly condition, cannot attain. It is not hard to point out some of the advantages that result from this state of concealment in which God keeps His people.
1. It tends to their humility.
2. It keeps them dependent.
3. This blindness belongs to the very nature of faith; without it, faith can have no existence.
4. Moreover, it tends to the comfort of Gods children. If all were laid open, then sorrow and sadness would come before their time.
II. THE PROMISE OF DIVINE DIRECTION. I will make darkness light before them, etc. Mainly God delivers information to His people in two ways.
1. He gives it by the written Word.
2. He has given us the volume of providence to be the commentary upon the volume of revelation. (S. Robins, M. A.)
Mysterious providences
I. SHOW THAT THE LORDS WAYS ARE MYSTERIOUS. Of this we have many instances in His works, both of providence and grace.
1. Take, e.g., the case of Moses. Or, turn from the leaders to the people who were led.
2. But to turn from Scripture to individual experience. How mysterious Gods dealings with each one of ourselves, from our birth to the present day.
3. If we turn from God s works of providence without, to His work of grace within, how mysterious indeed are the ways of our God!
II. Though Gods ways are mysterious, HIS INTENTIONS ARE NEVERTHELESS MERCIFUL.
III. THROUGHOUT THE WHOLE HIS LOVE IS ABIDING. Conclusion–
1. If Gods ways are mysterious, be careful to avoid forming rash judgments respecting them; beware lest you speak of them unadvisedly with your lips.
2. Still further, if we know Gods intentions to be merciful, how safe are our ways in His hands!
3. If Gods love be abiding, should we not lie in His hands, as clay in the hands of the potter? Should we not seek to bring every thought unto the obedience of Christ? Should we not shelter ourselves under every trial in Him who is a strong tower and house of defence? (J. Lombard.)
The spiritual condition of man
I. THE SUBJECTS OF DIVINE GRACE.
II. THE OPERATIONS OF DIVINE GRACE. There are more paths than one. The path of repentance is followed by the path of faith in Jesus–faith in the truths of the Gospel–faith in the promises of God. There is another path, which, by nature, is not known–the path of obedience. They are led in the way of holiness.
III. THE EFFECTS OF DIVINE GRACE. I Will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. Who can make darkness light before them but the Fountain, the Author, the Source of light and life and being, and all the blessings connected with life? (S. Drew, M. A.)
Divine leadings
I. THE SPECIAL DEALINGS OF THE LORD WITH HIS PEOPLE. I will bring the blind, etc.
II. THE UNALTERABLE DECISION ON THEIR BEHALF. And not forsake them. (James Walls.)
Darkness made light
This text is a prophecy of the return of Israel from Babylon after their captivity. We find from the history of Ezra how the little remnant that set out from Babylon was brought safely to Jerusalem. Their way from Babylon was a striking picture of our way to the heavenly home that is promised to us.
I. MARK THE WAYS OF GOD AS MYSTERIOUS WAYS; that is, not understood by the light of nature, or of intellect.
1. Gods children by nature are blind (Eph 2:3; Psa 13:3).
2. We cannot understand savingly a single truth of Gods Word by our own light, inquiry, teaching, application. We know not the nature of sin, nor God as a God of pardon, peace, and hope.
3. We continue blind until each step is unfolded to our view, and spiritual apprehension clears our way (1Co 2:9-10).
4. Blind also to the way God is really dealing with His children.
II. View GODS WAYS AS MERCIFUL LEADINGS. I will make darkness light before them. All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth All! Some clearly in sunshine. But how is it in trial, when He thwarts instead of indulges?. There may be times when we are unable to see what is the next step to take. Watch the Lord s time. Wait at the throne of grace. Dont forget that trial is Gods appointed mercy. There is mercy in the end, if not in the beginning. By our not seeing our way we are taught to live by faith.
III. THE WISDOM OF HIS DEALINGS. I will make crooked things straight, etc. Solomon asks (Ecc 7:13) who can make the crooked straight? Why, none but God. Many of Gods ways in providence and in grace seem to us very crooked, but we must trust, and judge of them by the end. Job, Joseph, etc. Judge God in His own way and wait. Out of apparent confusion comes real order. Apparent severity shows itself to be real kindness.
IV. GODS DEALINGS ARE FAITHFUL. These things will I do . . . and not forsake them. Think of the character of Him who makes the promise. (C. Bridges.)
The blind befriended
I. TO WHOM THE PROMISE IS MADE.
II. THE PROMISE THAT IS MADE TO THEM. I will bring, etc.
1. God Himself will be the guide of His people when they feel their blindness. To lead blind men is not an office generally sought; it is not supposed to be attended with any great honour; but it is a very kindly office, and one which any Christian man may be right glad to render to his afflicted friend. But only think of God Himself coming and guiding the blind! He will not leave you to stumble and grope your way, nor will He bid you depend upon your fellow-Christian, who is as blind as yourself, but He will be your guide.
2. Being their guide, He will lead them in ways they never went before. Of course, when a blind man knows the way, he can almost go without the guide.
3. Although the way by which we go be a way that we know not, we shall be led safely in it; for it is not only said, I will lead them, but I will bring them, which is more. You may lead a man, but he may be unable to follow you.
III. WHAT SHALL COME OF IT? I Will make darkness light, etc.
1. If you are in the darkness of trouble, trust in God and the trouble will vanish. The trouble may remain, but it will no longer distress you.
2. There is a crook in every lot, but trust in God. He can make the most crooked thing that ever did happen suddenly turn out to be the very straightest thing that ever occurred for our welfare.
IV. WHAT WILL BE THE END OF IT? Your life will be strewn with mercies, fulfilled promises. These things will I do unto them and not forsake them. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The blind led
I. OUR GLORIOUS LEADER I will bring them, the Lord says, I will lead them. In other places He tells us He has prepared a kingdom for us; here He tells us He will conduct us to it. But He does not accomplish this in His own person. In the beginning of this chapter, He introduces His dear Son to us as His servant, chosen by Him to bring to pass all His merciful designs concerning us. That dear Son therefore is become to us a Leader and Guide. Behold, I have given Him the Lord says elsewhere for a witness to the people, a Leader and Commander to the people; and St. Paul, when speaking of God as bringing His many sons unto glory, places immediately the Lord Jesus at their head, calling Him the Captain of their salvation, at once their Saviour, their Ruler, and their Guide. Here is another proof then that Christs appointed work was not ended when He had offered Himself for our sins. That was the beginning, rather than the end, of it.
II. THOSE WHOM THE LORD IS LEADING. The blind.
III. THE ROAD ALONG WHICH THE LORD IS LEADING US. He speaks of it–
1. As new to us.
2. As dark or mysterious.
IV. THE OCCASIONAL LIGHT AND RELIEF WHICH THE LORD PROMISES TO HIS PEOPLE IN THEIR WAY. I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. It is useless for us to attempt to do it. Nor must we look to our fellow-men to do it for us. Our help in this case, as in every other, cometh from the Lord.
V. A PROMISE OF PERMANENCY AND UNCHANGEABLENESS IN JEHOVAHS LOVE TO THE PEOPLE HE IS GUIDING. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them. The Lord speaks here like one who has fully made up His mind to do what He promises, knows He can do it, and is determined He will. (C. Bradley, M. A.)
Safe walking for the blind
I. THE PERSONS HERE SPOKEN OF.
II. THE WAY, THE PATHS, IN WHICH THEY ARE FOUND.
III. THE BLESSED GUIDE THEY HAVE, AND WHAT HE DOES FOR THEM. The Eternal God trusts them not to cherubs nor seraphs; to angels nor archangels; to ministers nor men; He, trusts them not to themselves, but He is Himself their guide. It was He that brought them out of darkness; and it is He that keeps them out of darkness. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
The leader of the blind
The sky is not more beautifully bespangled with stars than the Bible is filled with promises. How completely these promises have been fulfilled in all those who have reached Immanuels land! But, Christians, you are not as yet come to the rest and to the inheritance which the Lord your God giveth you; but thus far He has been your helper. What He has done for you is only a pledge of what He will do. Let us survey Him–
I. AS OUR LEADER.
II. AS OUR INTERPRETER. I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. This is clearly distinguished from the former. You may lead the blind by a way that they know not, and in paths that they have not known, while you may not explain to them, but only tell them to depend on you as a guide, while they are unconscious of anything except progress. But it is not so with God. God illumines all whom He guides. The knowledge He gives to His people is gradual; and we may observe four instances in which He makes darkness light before them, and crooked things straight.
1. As to doctrine.
2. As to experience. In regard to prayer they are sometimes perplexed. It is the same also with regard to joy. Milne, the ecclesiastical historian, said, Had I been as destitute of comfort some years ago as I am now, I should have been exceedingly confounded; but I have learned not to live on lively frames, but on Gods own word. I know that He is faithful who hath promised. So, also, in regard to assurance.
3. With regard to practical duties.
4. With regard to some of HIS providential duties. Gods way is sometimes in the sea, and His footsteps are not known. But sometimes the darkness is dispelled even now.
III. As His PEOPLES UNCHANGEABLE FRIEND. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them. They deserve to be forsaken, and this they will acknowledge readily enough. They may think them selves forsaken, and we have instances of this upon record. But they may be forsaken., God Himself speaks of this in His Word. But observe the time: For a small moment have I forsaken thee. So it is in the apprehension of faith; so it is always very short when compared with eternity. Then Observe the manner, of His forsaking, them, for however we may explain this, it must be consistent with His assurance of not forsaking: These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them. There are three ways in which God may forsake His people, and yet the promise of the text may remain substantially the same–
1. In their outward condition. He can reduce them in their circumstances, bereave them of their dearest relations, remove their possession and enjoyments, and leave them bare and destitute. But all this is very compatible with His presence.
2. As to the enjoyment of spiritual comfort. Thou didst hide Thy face, and I was troubled. But when these spiritual consolations are suspended, there are great searchings of heart, much that shows the Spirit of God to be with them; for this could not come from nature.
3. As to the exercise of grace, not the existence thereof. Here we may refer to good Hezekiah. God, in the midst of trouble and a fearful invasion, left him for a while to see what was in his heart. Peter for a season also was left to himself. Jesus said, I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not; but it did fail. It did as to its exercise, not as to its principle. (W. Jay, M. A.)
God conceals that He may guide
Away in the interior of Chins, I once climbed a precipice that was almost perpendicular, if indeed it did not overhang. Steps had been cut out for the feet in the sandstone, and stout iron chains had been pinned within a few inches of the steps to afford support to the hands. My face was turned towards the rock as I went up, and I never thought of the gulf that yawned beneath. When I came to descend, I found I could not accomplish it with my face turned towards empty space and my eye looking down into the dim abyss, and with no solid object in the field of view. I was mastered by an inveterate dizziness, and should have dropped, but for the timely assistance of a friend. I had to shut out the thought of the terrible abyss by turning my face to the rock, whilst my friend preceded me in the descent, and guided my feet into the successive stepping-places. Many of Gods mysteries are things that He has hidden from us to the glory of His pity and gentleness. He has to guide us over a great many of the perilous places of life in blindness. It would be death if the veil were taken away. He has to bring us down a great many fearsome descents with our face to the dead rock. If we could take in the whole position we should be overwhelmed. (T. G. Selby.)
Providence in the life of Cowper
Of all the writings of William Cowper, probably the hymn, God moves in a mysterious way, is best known. How Cowper came to write this hymn forms one of the most remarkable episodes of his eventful life. Cowper had one of his fits of melancholy, and persuaded himself, so his biographers assert, that God wanted him to offer himself as a sacrifice. He decided to carry out this idea, and, hiring a post-chaise, drove to the river Ouse. The night was dark, and the coachman by some means or other mistook the way, and instead of arriving at the exact spot where Cowper had intended to drown himself, the poet found himself at his own door. On entering the house Cowper sat down and composed his most famous hymn. (Christian Budget.)
God blindfolds that He may lead
We are so timid and tender and unschooled that God has often to place the shadow of His hand across our vision, just as the Alpine guide will blindfold a nervous traveller, so that he may guide him unharmed across some terrific chasm. (T. G. Selby.)
Obedient following
A traveller in South Africa was anxious to go to a certain place which could only be reached by the aid of a Kaffir guide. Into his hands the traveller was compelled to commit his life, and he says: It was not long before I saw that the old man was guiding me along some recognised path invisible to my eyes, but plainly designed to carry us round clumps of thorn and treacherous stones. Not a landmark could I see to indicate the turnings of the route, but our guide was never at a loss. Only by implicit obedience did the traveller reach his goal. (Christian.)
I will make darkness light before them
Darkness, light; and crooked things straight
I. THE BELIEVERS DARKNESS IS TURNED INTO LIGHT, AND THE CROOKS OF HIS LOT ARE STRAIGHTENED.
1. The frequent grim darkness.
(1) Much of it is of his own imagining. Many of our sorrows are purely homespun, and some minds are specially fertile in self-torture.
(2) Much existing darkness is exaggerated.
(3) Troubles disappear just when we expect them to become overwhelming.
(4) When the trial comes, God has a way of making His peoples trials cease Just as they reach their culminating point.
(5) Every trial was foreseen, and has been forestalled.
(6) However severe the trial, God has promised that as our days our strength shall be.
(7) Especially dwell upon the promise that the Lord will make your darkness light. How is it done? Sometimes by the sun of His providence. Often by the moon of Christian experience, which shines with borrowed light, but yet with sweet and tranquil brightness. Frequently by a sight of Jesus going before, and by hearing Him say, Follow Me; fear not; for in all your afflictions I am afflicted.
2. The crooks of the believers lot.
(1) One may lie in your poverty.
(2) Another in some very crooked calamity.
(3) If free from these, he has at least a crooked self. The others would matter little but for this. It may be you have crooked temptations-temptations to profanity, etc.
3. God will make all the crooked things straight.
(1) It may be that some are straight now; the making straight is only to make them seem so to us. Our crosses are our best estates.
(2) God can bend the crooked straight, and what will not bend He can break. The crooked character has been bent straight; the judgment of God has taken away the crook out of the household, so that the righteous might have peace. If He do not this, He will give power to overleap the difficulty 2Sa 22:30).
II. SOME WORDS TO THE SEEKER.
1. Some doctrines are dark to you. God makes all light to faith.
2. Perhaps your darkness rises from deep depression of mind. Faith must precede its dispersion.
3. Your crooked natural disposition God can make straight. Note–
(1) That which saves is not what is, but what will be.
(2) It is not what you can do, but what God can do.
(3) This work may not be yours at once, but it shall be soon.
III. TWO LESSONS TO BELIEVERS.
1. If God will thus make all your darkness light and all your crooked things straight, do not forestall your troubles.
2. Always believe in the power of prayer. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
God brings safely through
How shall we pass through this trial, dear? asked an anxious wife of her Christian husband at a time of great perplexity. Ask me six months hence, he replied, how we have passed through it, and I will tell you.
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 16. In paths] The Septuagint, Syriac, Vulgate, and nine MSS., (two ancient,) read ubenotiboth.
Will I do unto them] asitem. This word, so written as it is in the text, means “thou wilt do,” in the second person. The Masoretes have indeed pointed it for the first person; but the yod in the last syllable is absolutely necessary to distinguish the first person; and so it is written in forty MSS., asithim.
Jarchi, Kimchi, Sal. ben Melec, c., agree that the past time is here put for the future, asithi for and indeed the context necessarily requires that interpretation. Farther it is to be observed that asithim is put for asithi lahem, “I have done them,” for “I have done for them;” as asitheni is for asiti li, “I have made myself,” for “I have made for myself,” Eze 29:2; and in the celebrated passage of Jephthah’s vow, Jdg 11:31, veheelitihu olah for heelithi lo olah, “I will offer him a burnt-offering,” for “I will offer unto him (that is, unto JEHOVAH) a burnt-offering;” by an ellipsis of the preposition of which Buxtorf gives many other examples, Thes. Grammat. lib. ii. 17. See also Clarke’s note on “Isa 65:5“. A late happy application of this grammatical remark to that much disputed passage has perfectly cleared up a difficulty which for two thousand years had puzzled all the translators and expositors, had given occasion to dissertations without number, and caused endless disputes among the learned on the question, whether Jephthah sacrificed his daughter or not; in which both parties have been equally ignorant of the meaning of the place, of the state of the fact, and of the very terms of the vow; which now at last has been cleared up beyond all doubt by my learned friend Dr. Randolph, Margaret Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford, in his Sermon on Jephthah’s Vow, Oxford, 1766. – L.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The blind; the Gentiles, who were blind, and were called so, above, Isa 42:7, and in many other places of Scripture, and were so accounted by the Jews.
By a way that they know not; by the way of truth, which hitherto hath been hidden from them, until by my word and Spirit I revealed it to them.
I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight; I will take away all hinderances, and give them all advantages and conveniences for their journey. I will direct them in the right way. I will enlighten their dark minds, and rectify their perverse wills and affections.
And not forsake them, until I have brought them with safety and comfort to the end of their journey.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
16. blindGod’s people,Israel, in captivity, needing a guide. In the ulterior sense the NewTestament Church, which was about to be led and enlightened by theSon of God as its leader and shepherd in the wilderness of the Romanempire, until it should reach a city of habitation. “A way . . .they knew not,” refers to the various means ployed by Providencefor the establishment of the Church in the world, such as would neverhave occurred to the mind of mere man. “Blind,” they arecalled, as not having heretofore seen God’s ways in ordering HisChurch.
make darkness light,c.implies that the glorious issue would only be known by the eventitself [VITRINGA]. Thesame holds good of the individual believer (Isa 30:21Psa 107:7; compare Hos 2:6;Hos 2:14; Eph 5:8;Heb 13:5).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not,…. The Targum interprets this of the people of Israel, thus,
“I will lead the house of Israel, which are like to the blind, in a way which they knew not.”
But it is better to understand it of the Gentiles, who, before the light of the Gospel came among them, were blind as to the true knowledge of God, and especially as in Christ; and of Christ, and the way of peace, life, and salvation by him; and of themselves, and their miserable estate and condition; and of the Spirit of God, and his operations; and of the Scriptures, the Gospel, and the doctrines of it; and which is the case of all men in a state of nature: but the Lord, by his Spirit, opens the eyes of their understandings, and shows them those things they were blind in, and ignorant of, and brings them by a way they knew not before; which way is Christ, the only way to the Father; the way of peace, righteousness, and life; the way to heaven, and eternal happiness: this they knew not before, but thought they must make their own way to God, and their peace with him; must be justified by their own works, and work out their own salvation; but, in conversion, this way to Christ is made known and plain unto them; and in this way the Lord brings all his people to eternal glory:
I will lead them in paths that they have not known; in the paths of duty and truth; in the paths of faith, righteousness, and holiness, and in the ordinances of the Gospel; which they were aliens and strangers to before:
I will make darkness light before them; by going before them himself, as before the children of Israel in a pillar of fire by night; by giving his word to enlighten them; by granting his good Spirit, as a spirit of illumination to them; and by lifting up the light of his countenance on them:
and crooked things straight; remove all obstructions, bear them up under all discouragements, and carry them through all difficulties:
these things will I do unto them, and not forsake them; which may be depended upon, being promised by him that is able to perform, is true, and faithful, and changes not; and, when done, shall not be the last done for them; he will never leave them, nor forsake them, till he has brought them safe to glory.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The great thing which is brought to pass by means of this catastrophe is the redemption of His people. “And I lead the blind by a way that they know not; by steps that they know not, I make them walk: I turn dark space before them into light, and rugged places into a plain. These are the things that I carry out, and do not leave.” The “blind” are those who have been deprived of sight by their sin, and the consequent punishment. The unknown ways in which Jehovah leads them, are the ways of deliverance, which are known to Him alone, but which have now been made manifest in the fulness of time. The “dark space” ( m achshak ) is their existing state of hopeless misery; the “rugged places” ( maaqasshm ) the hindrances that met them, and dangers that threatened them on all sides in the foreign land. The mercy of Jehovah adopts the blind, lights up the darkness, and clears every obstacle away. “ These are the things ” ( hadd e bharm ): this refers to the particulars already sketched out of the double manifestation of Jehovah in judgment and in mercy. The perfects of the attributive clause are perfects of certainty.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
16. And I will lead the blind. After having shewn that the strength of the enemies cannot prevent God from delivering his people, he proceeds with that consolation to which he had formerly adverted. He describes by the word blind those whose affairs are so difficult, and intricate, and disordered, that they know not to what hand to turn, or in what direction to flee, and, in short, who see no means of escape, but deep gulfs on every hand. When our affairs proceed smoothly enough, a plain and easy path is placed before our eyes; and, in like manner, when our affairs are painful and distressing, and especially when they hold out no hope of relief, but threaten destruction to us, and are covered with deep and melancholy darkness, we are blinded. When we have thus no means of escape, the Prophet tells us that at that very time we ought, especially to hope and to look for assistance from the Lord.
It is often advantageous to us also to have no way open to us, to be straitened and hemmed in on every hand, and even to be blinded, that we may learn to depend solely on God’s assistance and to rely on him; for, so long as a plank is left on which we think that we can seize, we turn to it with our whole heart. While we are driven about in all directions, the consequence is, that the remembrance of heavenly grace fades from our memory. If, therefore, we desire that God should assist us and relieve our adversity, we must be blind, we must turn away our eyes from the present condition of things, and restrain our judgment, that we may entirely rely on his promises. Although this blindness is far from being pleasant, and shews the weakness of our mind, yet, if we judge from the good effects which it produces, we ought not greatly to shun it; for it is better to be “blind” persons guided by the hand of God, than, by excessive sagacity, to form labyrinths for ourselves.
And will turn darkness before them into light. When he promises that he will give “light” instead of “darkness,” he confirms what has been already said; and therefore, although we see not even a ray of light in adversity, yet we ought not to despair of God’s assistance, but at that very time we ought especially to embrace his promises; for the Lord will easily change darkness into light, make straight the crooked windings, and lead us into the path, that we may walk with safety. Yet let us perceive that these things are promised to believers alone, who intrust themselves to God, and allow themselves to be governed by him; and, in short, who have known their blindness, and willingly follow him as their leader, and amidst the darkness of afflictions patiently wait for the dawn of grace. To those only who abide by his promises does he stretch out his hand, and not to the wise men (159) who wish to see in spite of him, or who are carried headlong by unlawful schemes.
(159) “ Non pas a ces sages mondains.” “Not to these worldly wise men.”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
16. And Antithetic continuance, equivalent to but. The result of catastrophes in preceding verse is the redemption of God’s people, and of others not incorrigible.
The blind Such as have lost spiritual sight through sin are brought to the truth, though not in their own self-prescribed way. Jehovah alone knows the true way, and therein he leads them. This applies, not only to the blinded Gentiles, but also often to him who had been a better-instructed Hebrew.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
DISCOURSE: 929
GODS DEALINGS WITH HIS PEOPLE OPENED
Isa 42:16. I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not; I will lead them in paths that they have not known; I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them.
GOD has fore-ordained every thing which he himself will do [Note: Act 15:18.]; and he has been gradually unfolding his designs from the beginning. The restoration of the Jews from Babylon, and the calling of the Gentiles into the Church, were very wonderful events, but in them the prediction before us was fulfilled: it receives a further accomplishment yet daily. We may take occasion from it to observe,
I.
Gods dealings are mysterious
The dispensations of his providence have been at all times dark
[How ill-judged (according to human estimate) was the direction given to the Israelites at their departure from Egypt [Note: Exo 14:2-3.]! Yet it eventually led to their more complete deliverance [Note: Exo 14:17; Exo 14:23; Exo 14:28.]. How strange do their long wanderings in the wilderness appear! Yet God conducted them by the right way [Note: Psa 107:7. Deu 8:2.]. The present dispersion of the Jews shall enhance the mercy and the glory of their restoration. Their degradation shall issue in their fulness [Note: Rom 11:12; Rom 11:31.].]
The dispensations of his grace are equally inscrutable
This is seen in the first quickening of men from their spiritual death
[God sets their sins in array before them. He charges home their guilt upon their consciences. He threatens them with his eternal wrath and indignation. Who would conceive that these were tokens of his love? How little did the three thousand, when pricked to the heart, imagine that joy was so nigh at hand [Note: Act 2:37.]! How little could the jailor, when about to commit suicide, have supposed that his terror was the first dawn of mercy to his soul [Note: Act 16:27-29.]! Thus are many still brought to Christ in a way which they knew not ]
It further appears in their subsequent spiritual life
[Men usually expect to be led on in a way of peace and joy. But God often leaves them to feel the depravity of their own hearts. He sometimes permits them to be in heaviness through manifold temptations. He suffers also many heavy calamities to befall them. They seem, at times, as though they should be overwhelmed. They not unfrequently are brought to the borders of despair. Yet these are ways which God takes to humble and to prove them. Who could have thought that Peters fall should be overruled for good? Yet perhaps nothing else would ever have purged out his self-confidence. The buffetings of Satan were earnestly deprecated by Paul [Note: 2Co 12:8.]; yet were they necessary to prevent the workings of pride [Note: 2Co 12:7.]. How true is that observation of the Psalmist [Note: Psa 77:19.]. The more we contemplate his dealings with his people, the more shall we exclaim with the Apostle [Note: Rom 11:33.]!]
In every dispensation, especially as it respects his people, we may say,
II.
His intentions are merciful
The perplexities of his people are often very great: but God has gracious designs in all [Note: Jer 29:10-11.]. We may see this remark exemplified in the case of Job
[How heavy and accumulated were the trials that came on him! He himself, in his haste, accused God of cruelty [Note: Job 10:3; Job 10:16.]. But the end shewed that God sent those trials in love [Note: Job 42:12-13. with Jam 5:11.].]
The case of Joseph also deserves attention in this view
[God intended to make him lord over his brethren [Note: Gen 37:6-10.]. But, instead of being advanced, he was sold as a slave [Note: Gen 37:28.]. Afterwards he was imprisoned as guilty of a capital offence [Note: Gen 39:17-20.]. He was above twenty years without ever hearing of his brethren. Yet we see at last the designs of God accomplished by the very means which appeared most calculated to defeat them.]
The same mercy is discoverable in Gods dealings with all his afflicted people
[He suffers their path to be for a time dark and intricate. But he invisibly directs and manages their concerns. He gradually removes their difficulties, and clears up their doubts. If he shut them up under the law, it is that they may embrace the offers of his Gospel [Note: Gal 3:23-24.] If he prune them as a vine, it is to augment their fruitfulness [Note: Joh 15:2.]. If he refine them as with fire, it is to advance the purification of their souls [Note: Mal 3:3.]. Thus he constrains them to acknowledge with the Psalmist [Note: Psa 97:2.].]
They indeed are often ready to doubt his love. But,
III.
His regards are permanent
God did not forget his people when they were in Babylon, neither will he now forsake those who trust in him
[He may appear for a season to have forsaken them [Note: Isa 54:7-8.]. They may be left to complain as though he had quite forgotten them [Note: Isa 49:14-16.]. But his having made them his people is a reason why he will not recede from his gracious purposes [Note: 1Sa 12:22.]. The Apostle was confident that God would complete his works of grace [Note: Php 1:6.].]
He will continue firm and unchangeable in his regards to them
[The prophets declare this in the strongest terms [Note: Isa 54:9-10. Jer 31:37; Jer 32:40.]. St. Paul abundantly confirms their testimony [Note: Rom 11:29.]. He commends this truth to us as a ground of cheerful confidence in the most trying seasons [Note: Heb 13:5-6.].]
Infer
1.
How careful should we be not to pass a hasty judgment on the Lords dealings!
[We are too ready under trials to exclaim with Jacob [Note: Gen 42:36.]. Yet the trials we complain of may be, as in his case, the necessary means of our preservation. It is the part of a believer to wait with patience for the issue [Note: Isa 28:16.].]
2.
How safely may we commit ourselves to Gods disposal!
[God alone knows what is best for us. He knows, too, how to accomplish his designs in the best manner. Let us therefore commit all our concerns to him [Note: Psa 37:5.]. Lot us lie as clay in the potters hands [Note: Jer 18:6.]. In whatever distress we be, let us follow the prophets direction [Note: Isa 50:10.].]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
Isa 42:16 And I will bring the blind by a way [that] they knew not; I will lead them in paths [that] they have not known: I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them.
Ver. 16. And I will bring the blind by a way. ] This was fulfilled, in the letter, to the Jews brought back from Babylon, where they had been close prisoners, and, in the mystery, to all Christ’s converts – more especially to that blind boy presented to Bishop Hooper, martyr, the day before his death, at Gloucester, where the boy had not long before suffered imprisonment for confessing the truth. a
I will make darkness light before.
a Acts and Mon.
Isaiah
THE BLIND MAN’S GUIDE
Isa 42:16 The grand stormy verses before these words, with all their dread array of natural convulsions, have one object-the tender guidance promised in the text. So we have the combination of terror and love, the blending in the divine government of terrible judgments and most gentle guidance. The words apply, of course, primarily to the redemption of Israel; but through them shines a picture of the greater redemption of humanity.
1. The blind travellers. They are blind, and their road is unknown to them. It is a symbol of our condition and of our paths in life. Our limited foresight cannot discern certainly even the next moment. It is always the unexpected that happens. We cannot tell what lies behind the next bend in the road, and there are so many bends; and behind one of them, we cannot tell whether it may be the next, sits ‘the Shadow feared of man.’ Life is like the course of the Congo, which makes so mighty a bend northward that, till it had been followed from source to mouth, no one could have supposed that it was to enter the ocean far away to the west. Not only God’s mercies, but our paths, are ‘new every morning.’ Experience, like conscience, sheds light mainly on what lies behind, and scarcely ‘doth attain to something of prophetic strain.’
2. The Leader. How tenderly God makes Himself the leader of the blind pilgrims! It does not matter about being blind, if we put our hands in His. Then He will ‘be to us instead of eyes.’ Jesus took the blind man by the hand.
So here is the promise of guidance by Providence, Word, Spirit. And here is the condition of receiving it, namely, our conscious blindness and realisation of the complexities of life, leading to putting ourselves into His hands in docile faith.
3. The gradual light. Darkness is made light. We receive the knowledge of each step, when it needs to be taken; the light shines only on the next; we are like men in a fog, who are able only to see a yard ahead.
4. The clearing away of hindrances. ‘Crooked things straight.’ A careful guide lifts stones out of a blind man’s way. How far is this true? There will be plenty of crooked things left crooked, but still so many straightened as to make our road passable.
5. The perpetual Presence. If God is with me, then all these blessings will surely be mine. He will be with me if I keep myself with Him. It is His felt presence that gives me light on the road, and levels and straightens out the crookedest and roughest path.
I will lead = I have led.
I will lead them, &c. Some codices, with Septuagint, Syriac, and Vulgate, commence this sentence with “And”.
These things, &c. Reference to Pentateuch (Deu 31:6).
will I do = have I done.
and not = and have not.
I will bring: Isa 29:18, Isa 29:24, Isa 30:21, Isa 32:3, Isa 35:5, Isa 35:8, Isa 48:17, Isa 54:13, Isa 60:1, Isa 60:2, Isa 60:19, Isa 60:20, Jer 31:8, Jer 31:9, Hos 2:14, Luk 1:78, Luk 1:79, Eph 5:8
lead: Isa 41:3, Jos 3:4, Hos 2:6
crooked: Isa 40:4, Isa 45:2, Ecc 1:15, Ecc 7:13, Luk 3:5
straight: Heb. into straightness
and not: Psa 94:14, Jer 32:39-41, Eze 14:23, Rom 5:8-10, Rom 8:29-31, 2Th 2:13, 2Th 2:14, 1Pe 1:3-5, Heb 13:5
Reciprocal: Exo 10:23 – but all 1Sa 12:22 – the Lord 1Ki 10:3 – told her Ezr 8:21 – to seek Psa 18:28 – my God Psa 23:3 – leadeth Psa 25:5 – Lead Psa 107:14 – brought Psa 138:8 – forsake Psa 146:8 – openeth Isa 11:16 – like as it was Isa 41:17 – I the God Isa 42:7 – open Isa 49:9 – to them Zec 10:11 – he shall Mat 20:30 – two Mar 10:52 – he received Luk 4:18 – and Luk 7:22 – how Luk 11:36 – the whole Luk 18:43 – he Joh 1:4 – the life Joh 3:9 – How Joh 9:7 – and came Joh 10:3 – and leadeth Act 22:11 – being Heb 12:13 – make
THE SPIRITUALLY BLESSED
And I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not; I will lead them in paths that they have not known: I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them.
Isa 42:16
I. When the prophet Isaiah uses such language as this, I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not, he just illustrates the language of Paul, I am what I am by the grace of God that is in me.I will do it. It is the Lord who begins and consummates the work: I will bringI will leadI will make darkness lightThese things will I do. It is thus that our thoughts are ever turned to the great First Causethe Origin as well as the Finisher of all that is good in man.
II. Moreover, they are the blind who are thus brought, and this is one of the wonders of salvation by grace.It is written, Hear, ye deaf, and look, ye blind, that ye may see; but is not that only to trifle with the diseased? Is it not to mock their helplessness, or sport with their infirmity? No; when it is omnipotent love which bids the blind to look. The fact that Jehovah gives the command is proof enough that He means to give power to obey it, would man but listen to the words.
III. And, further, the way is an unknown one.Reason could not discover it. Mans ingenuity could not invent it. His fancied righteousness would only have blocked it up. Indeed, the efforts made by man for more than four thousand years had all been baffled, and the result of his sagest devices had only been an increase of sorrow. But the Lord points to His way; He leads the blind into it; and then they find it to be one of pleasantness and peace. It is, indeed, the way of life.
IV. And still more, it is written, I will not forsake them.Having begun the work He will carry it on, for He is the Lord and changes not. The fabric which grace has founded, grace will rear, till the copestone be put on with shoutings of Grace, grace unto it! As surely as rivers run down to the sea, or as light spreads, nay, as surely as God is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever, the soul which grace has visited will be guided to glory.
Isa 42:16-17. And I will bring the blind The ignorant Gentiles, represented as blind, Isa 42:7, and in many other parts of Scripture, and accounted blind by the Jews; by a way that they knew not By the way of truth, which hitherto hath been hidden from them. I will make darkness light before them, &c. I will enlighten their dark minds, rectify their perverse wills and affections, and direct them in the right way, until I have brought them, with safety and comfort, to the end of their journey. They shall be turned back, &c. This may be understood, either, 1st, Of the converted Gentiles, turned back from their former sinful courses, and sincerely grieving, and being ashamed, that they should ever have been guilty of such folly and wickedness as to worship and trust in idols; or, 2d, Of those Gentiles who, when their brethren embraced the true religion, persisted obstinately in their idolatrous practices.
42:16 And I will bring the {t} blind by a way [that] they knew not; I will lead them in paths [that] they have not known: I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do for them, and not forsake them.
(t) That is, my poor people, who are in perplexity and care.
However, He would lead His own people, those unable to find their way through the blinding storm of His judgment, to safety (cf. Rev 12:14). The people of Israel were blind and could not bring the Gentiles into the light, but God would lead His blind servants (cf. Isa 42:7). He promised definitely to do this.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)