Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Isaiah 46:9

Remember the former things of old: for I [am] God, and [there is] none else; [I am] God, and [there is] none like me,

9. former things of old ] See on Isa 41:22. The emphasis here lies less on the predictions than on the events themselves, which are of such a nature as to demonstrate that Jehovah alone is truly God.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Remember the former things … – Bear in mind the repeated and constant proofs that have been given that Yahweh is the true God – the proofs derived from the prediction of future events, and from the frequent interpositions of his providence in your behalf as a nation.

For I am God – (See the notes at Isa 44:6).

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Isa 46:9-11

Remember the former things of old

The purposes of God


I.

When we come to look at THE PURPOSES OF GOD, we must not be misled by words. The word purpose, with us, supposes several things, which have nothing to do with the same term when applied to God. There is, with God, no ignorance previously to the formation of His purposes; no new light thrown on circumstances, out of which His purpose arises; no period in His past eternity, when His purposes were not formed; no consulting either with Himself or with others, with regard to their formation. Perhaps you may be ready to say, if we are to look at the purpose of God in this way, it is not a purpose at all, in the sense in which we use the term. And it certainly is not, as you will perceive. We accommodate human language to the infinite characteristics of the Divine nature; but we must do it with caution, and must be careful what measure of idea we associate with our common terms, when we are applying them to God. If not, we shall be deceived in the conclusions we draw and the doctrines we believe. If the purpose of God is to be viewed as it really is, we take it to be simply this: Gods foreknowledge of everything that is to come to pass, together with the operation of His influence upon that foreknowledge, in connection with those things. His foreknowledge had no beginning; His resolution, as to what He was to do, could have no beginning. From the moment He foresaw, He resolved or purposed. Such appears to be the meaning of the word purpose as applied to God. If it should be said, This is a view of purpose altogether foreign from the view we take of it, we grant it. But why? Because the nature of God is altogether foreign from ours. Ours is a finite and limited nature in itself; His is infinite and unlimited.


II.
THE APPLICATION OF GODS PURPOSE IN REFERENCE TO MAN.

1. Are we to regard the purposes of God as involving in them the charge of originating immorality and sin? Did God purpose that man should be a sinner? If His purposes are to be taken and explained, as we take and explain our own, then this was the case. If He foresaw that man would fall before He made him, yet had not determined whether He should permit this or not, and then permitted it, we should say that the purpose of God implies in it a part at least of the moral guilt of His creature. But He had formed no such purpose as this. He foresaw that man would fall; He foresaw the provision that was to be made for his case; but there was no period in eternity when He had not foreseen this, and hence no purpose arose out of the mere incident of the liability of man to fall. He was left to the working of those powers which God gave him: and with the working of those powers the purposes of God never interfered.

2. But if we look not merely to the connection between the purpose of God and the origin of evil, but also to the connection between the purpose of God and the free agency of man, we have another field opened to us, in examining which we must very carefully recollect the views that we have taken of the Divine purpose. When God created man, He gave him powers and faculties which He intended to commit to his trust, and which He aid commit to his trust. He foresaw what use he would make of them, and how far he would abuse them; but He did not destroy them, in order that they might not be abused. There is an entire freedom in the operation of our faculties, so far as our own consciousness is concerned; are they not also exhibited to us as free, in the Word of God? Are we not addressed upon the subject of our shortcomings and our sins, as if we were held strictly free by the God that addresses us? Are we not hailed to return from our iniquity, as if we were free to return? Are we not invited to lay hold on the hope set before us in the Gospel, as if we were free to accept the invitation? Let us look next at the view that men take of our capacity; and we shall find, that except when they are induced to quarrel with the Word of God, except when they are induced to throw difficulties in the way of their own salvation, they too act upon the principle that man is free.

3. But let us look at the purpose of God in reference to mans responsibility. If man were not free, on what ground could he be held to be responsible? and does any one doubt of his responsibility to God? The responsibility of man arises out of the very nature of his faculties, just like the proof of his free agency in the use of them. And we find the Word of God harmonising with the view, which our own faculties would alone give us, in holding the responsibility of man. Then what has the purpose of God to do with our responsibility? It merely foresees the consequences of that responsibility, and purposes to leave the man to those consequences. Reject and neglect the great salvation, and you cannot be saved: such is the announced purpose of God. Accept that salvation, and he that believeth shall be saved: such is also the announced purpose of God. His purpose, therefore, in all these respects, is nothing more than His foreknowledge, connected with His determination respecting what He foresees; both the foreknowledge and the determination how He shall act in reference to what He foresees, being eternal.

4. Regarding the purpose of God in this light, we may take yet another view of its application, namely, its connection with the Gospel of Christ. With your belief, or your unbelief, the purpose of God has nothing to do, except so far as that purpose determines to reward the one, and to punish the other.

(1) Remembering these things, which of you would be disposed, in the face of the nature of God, in the face of his own consciousness, in the face of the settled opinions of all men and all ages, in the face of the Word of God itself, to say that he is not held responsible for the exercise of the powers which God has given him? In everything but religion, we act upon this consciousness of freedom and responsibility.

(2) Let us associate our own salvation with the determined purpose of God, that they who come to Him shall in no wise be cast out, and that he that believeth shall and must be saved. (J. Burner.)

A fourfold aspect of the Infinite


I.
AS THE ONE AND ONLY GOD. I am God, and there is none else. The Bible establishes the doctrine of monotheism. This doctrine–

1. Agrees with our spiritual nature. The whole soul, both in its searches after truth and love, one for the intellect, the other for the heart, struggles after unity; it turns to the centre, as the needle to the pole, as the flower to the sun

2. Explains the harmony of the universe. How is it that all things in their constitution fit into each other, and in their operations are so harmonious and uniform? The whole machine shows in all its parts and revolutions that it had but one Architect.

3. Makes clear human obligation. If there be but one God, His will should be the supreme law of all our activities; His being should be the centre of our sympathies and love. Were there more gods than one we might be distracted on the question as to who should have our love and obedience.


II.
AS ACQUAINTED WITH ALL THE FUTURITIES OF THE UNIVERSE. Declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times, the things that are not yet done. There is one mind in the universe, and only one, whose infinite glance comprehended all, swept over all space, and over all durations. Though such a fact baffles all our attempts at comprehension, its denial would undeify God. The whole history of the universe, from beginning to end, was in His mind before it took active shapes, or concrete embodiments. Hence–

(1) He can have no surprises.

(2) He can have no disappointments.


III.
AS PURPOSING NOTING THAT CAN BY ANY POSSIBILITY FAIL. My counsel shall stand, &c.

1. God has a concern for His pleasure. The apostle calls His pleasure a good pleasure. What is it? The pleasure of disinterested benevolence.

2. All Gods purposes point to His pleasure. Whatever will make His creatures happy is His pleasure; and the whole universe is constructed on this principle.

3. None of Gods purposes shall fail. My purposes shall stand. The special purpose here referred to was terribly realised (Dan 5:30). Our purposes are constantly being broken; the vast shore of human history is crowded with the wrecks of broken purposes. Our purposes are broken sometimes–

(1) Through the lack of power to carry them out.

(2) Through the lack of time to carry them out. God has ample power and ample time to carry out His purposes.


IV.
AS HAVING ABSOLUTE POWER TO SUBORDINATE EVEN UNGODLY MEN TO HIS SERVICE. Calling a ravenous bird, &c. In Gods great moral kingdom He has two classes of servants.

(1) Those who serve Him by their will–all holy angels and sainted men.

(2) Those who serve Him against their will–wicked men and devils.

Conclusion–What an ennobling view of our God! He is One: let us centre our souls on Him; He knows all futurities, let us trust His providence. He will fulfil all His purposes, let us acquiesce in His arrangements. He renders even His moral enemies subservient to His own will, therefore let us trust in Him who liveth for ever. (Homilist.)

Cyrus, a ravenous bird

Cyrus is compared to a ravenous bird on account of the celerity of his movements (Isa 41:3), just asNebuchadnezzar had been likened to an eagle (Jer 49:22;Eze 17:3). (Prof. J. Skinner, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Remember the former things of old; what I have done for you, and in the world, my evident predictions of future things justified by the event, and those other miraculous works whereby I have abundantly proved my Divinity.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

9. formernamely, proofs ofthe sole Godship of Jehovah, from predictions fulfilled, andinterpositions of God in behalf of Israel (Isa45:5).

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Remember the former things of old,…. The things that were from the beginning, or the ancient things done by the Lord, whether as the effects of power, wisdom, and goodness, or in wrath, or in mercy; such as the creation of the heavens, and the earth, and all things in them; the destruction of the old world, and of Sodom and Gomorrah; the bringing of Israel out of Egypt through the Red sea and wilderness, to Canaan’s land, and all the wondrous things then done for them; which are so many proofs of the true deity of the God of Israel, in opposition to the idols of the Gentiles:

for I am God, and there is none else; as he must needs be what did the above things:

I am God, and there is none like me; for greatness or goodness, or that has done the like things; not one of the gods of the Gentiles.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

9. Remember the former things. This is an explanation of the preceding statement; for he expresses more fully what he formerly meant, that is, that God hath testified of himself by sufficiently numerous proofs, and hath shewed what is his nature and greatness; and that not merely for two or three days, or for a few years, but at all times; for he had continued his benefits, and had incessantly bestowed his grace upon them. Hence he infers that the manifestations of his divinity, being so clear, ought to prevent them from giving their hearts to another.

That I am God. In this passage the particle כי ( ki) does not signify for, but that, and introduces a clause which explains what goes before. Besides, as we have formerly explained, God wishes not only that he may be acknowledged, but that he alone may be acknowledged; and therefore he wishes to be separated from all the gods which men have made for themselves, that we may fix our whole attention on him; because, if he admitted any companion, his throne would fall or shake; for either there is one God or there is none at all.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(9) I am God.The first predicate is El, the mighty and strong one, the second Elohim, the one true object of worship. The verse that follows asserts what in modern language would be called the omniscience and the omnipotence of God.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

Isa 46:9 Remember the former things of old: for I [am] God, and [there is] none else; [I am] God, and [there is] none like me,

Ver. 9. Remember the former things of old. ] Again he calleth upon them to remember who had so foully forgot themselves in the days of Ahaz and Manasseh, and would do so again in Babylon, where they kept not themselves from idols. Papists unman themselves, or otherwise they could not be such gross idolaters.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

GOD. Hebrew El. App-4.

God. Hebrew. Elohim. App-4.

none. See note on Isa 5:8.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

the former: Isa 42:9, Isa 65:17, Deu 32:7, Neh 9:7-37, Psa 78:1-72, Psa 105:1 – Psa 106:48, Psa 111:4, Jer 23:7, Jer 23:8, Dan 9:6-15

I am God: Isa 45:5, Isa 45:6, Isa 45:14, Isa 45:18, Isa 45:21, Isa 45:22

and there is none like: Isa 46:5, Deu 33:26

Reciprocal: Exo 8:10 – there is none Exo 20:3 – General Job 10:13 – I know Psa 22:27 – All the ends Pro 29:26 – ruler’s favour Isa 27:3 – I the Isa 40:18 – General Isa 41:23 – that we may know Isa 43:10 – that ye Isa 43:12 – my witnesses Isa 43:18 – General Isa 44:7 – who Isa 44:8 – Is there Isa 44:21 – Remember Isa 47:7 – so that Isa 48:3 – declared Jer 10:6 – there Jer 32:17 – there Mic 7:18 – a God Mar 12:32 – for Joh 8:58 – I am Act 15:18 – General Jam 2:19 – General

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Isa 46:9-11. Remember the former things What I have done for you and in the world, my evident predictions of future things, justified by the event; and those other miraculous works, whereby I have abundantly proved my divinity. Declaring the end from the beginning Foretelling from the beginning of the world, or from the beginning of your nation, those future events which should happen in succeeding ages, even to the end of the world, or to the end of your commonwealth; for such predictions we find delivered by Moses, the first founder of their state. My counsel shall stand As I will not, so no other power can, disappoint my purposes and predictions. This is another argument urged for the divinity of the God of Israel, namely, his foreknowledge and prediction of future events, of which the prophet subjoins a particular instance in the next words. Calling a ravenous bird, or eagle, from the east From Persia, as Isa 41:2. There can be no doubt that Cyrus is here meant. Kings and princes are often compared in Scripture to eagles, Jer 49:22; Eze 17:3. But it has been thought that there is a peculiar propriety in this application to Cyrus, as the eagle well denotes the magnanimity, the quickness of judgment, the celerity in all his expeditions and motions, for which Cyrus was so remarkable. We are also told by Plutarch, that Cyrus had an aquiline nose; and Xenophon expressly relates, that his standard was a golden eagle; which yet continues, says he, to be the standard of the Persian kings. Vitringa.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

The Israelites needed to remember all that God had done going all the way back to Creation. Only then would they become convinced that Yahweh was unique, the only true God.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)