CHAPTER 42
Isa 42:1-25.
MESSIAH THE
ANTITYPE OF
CYRUS.
God's description of His character
(Isa 42:1-4).
God addresses Him directly
(Isa 42:5-7).
Address to the people to attend to the subject
(Isa 42:8, 9).
Call to all, and especially the exile Jews to rejoice in the coming
deliverance
(Isa 42:10-25).
1. my servant--The law of prophetic suggestion leads Isaiah from
Cyrus to the far greater Deliverer, behind whom the former is lost sight
of. The express quotation in
Mt 12:18-20,
and the description can apply to Messiah alone
(Ps 40:6;
with which compare
Ex 21:6;
Joh 6:38;
Php 2:7).
Israel, also, in its highest ideal, is called the "servant" of God
(Isa 49:3).
But this ideal is realized only in the antitypical Israel, its
representative-man and Head, Messiah (compare
Mt 2:15,
with Ho 11:1).
"Servant" was the position assumed by the Son of God throughout His
humiliation.
-
elect--chosen by God before the foundation of the world for an
atonement
(1Pe 1:20;
Re 13:8).
Redemption was no afterthought to remedy an unforeseen evil
(Ro 16:25, 26;
Eph 3:9, 11;
2Ti 1:9, 10;
Tit 1:2, 3).
In
Mt 12:18
it is rendered "My beloved"; the only beloved Son, beloved in a
sense distinct from all others. Election and the love of
God are inseparably joined.
-
soul--a human phrase applied to God, because of the intended union of
humanity with the Divinity: "I Myself."
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delighteth--is well pleased with, and accepts, as a propitiation. God could have "delighted" in no created being as a mediator (compare
Isa 42:21; 63:5;
Mt 3:17).
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spirit upon him--
(Isa 11:2; 61:1;
Lu 4:18;
Joh 3:34).
-
judgment--the gospel dispensation, founded on justice, the canon
of the divine rule and principle of judgment called "the law"
(Isa 2:3;
compare
Isa 42:4; 51:4; 49:6).
The Gospel has a discriminating judicial effect: saving
to penitents; condemnatory to Satan, the enemy
(Joh 12:31; 16:11),
and the wilfully impenitent
(Joh 9:39).
Mt 12:18
has, "He shall show," for "He shall bring forth," or "cause
to go forth." Christ both produced and announced His
"judgment." The Hebrew dwells most on His producing it;
Matthew on His announcement of it: the two are joined in
Him.
2. Matthew
[Mt 12:19]
marks the kind of "cry" as that of altercation by quoting it,
"He shall not strive"
(Isa 53:7).
-
street--the Septuagint translates "outside." An image from an
altercation in a house, loud enough to be heard in the street outside: appropriate of Him who "withdrew Himself" from the public fame
created by His miracles to privacy
(Mt 12:15;
Mt 12:34,
there, shows another and sterner aspect of His character, which is also
implied in the term "judgment").
3. bruised--"It pleased the Lord to bruise Him"
(Isa 53:5, 10;
Ge 3:15);
so He can feel for the bruised. As
Isa 42:2
described His unturbulent spirit towards His violent enemies
(Mt 12:14-16),
and His utter freedom from love of notoriety, so
Isa 42:3,
His tenderness in cherishing the first spark of grace in the penitent
(Isa 40:11).
-
reed--fragile: easily "shaken with the wind"
(Mt 11:7).
Those who are at best feeble, and who besides are oppressed by calamity
or by the sense of sin.
-
break--entirely crush or condemn. Compare "bind up the broken-hearted"
(Isa 50:4; 61:1;
Mt 11:28).
-
flax--put for the lamp-wick, formed of flax. The believer is the
lamp (so the Greek,
Mt 5:15;
Joh 5:35):
his conscience enlightened by the Holy Ghost is the wick.
"Smoking" means "dimly burning," "smouldering," the flame not quite
extinct. This expresses the positive side of the penitent's religion;
as "bruised reed," the negative. Broken-hearted in himself, but not
without some spark of flame: literally, "from above." Christ will
supply such a one with grace as with oil. Also, the light of nature
smouldering in the Gentiles amidst the hurtful fumes of error. He not
only did not quench, but cleared away the mists and superadded the
light of revelation. See JEROME, To
Algasia, Question 2.
-
truth--Mt 12:20
quotes it, "send forth judgment unto victory." Matthew, under
the Spirit, gives the virtual sense, but varies the word, in order to
bring out a fresh aspect of the same thing. Truth has in itself the
elements of victory over all opposing forces. Truth is the
victory of Him who is "the truth"
(Joh 14:6).
The gospel judicial sifting ("judgment") of believers and
unbelievers, begun already in part
(Joh 3:18, 19; 9:39),
will be consummated victoriously in truth only at His second
coming;
Isa 42:13, 14,
here, and
Mt 12:32, 36, 41, 42,
show that there is reference to the judicial aspect of the
Gospel, especially finally: besides the mild triumph of Jesus coming in
mercy to the penitent now
(Isa 42:2),
there shall be finally the judgment on His enemies, when the
"truth" shall be perfectly developed. Compare
Isa 61:1-3,
where the two comings are similarly joined
(Ps 2:4-6, 8;
Re 15:2, 4; 19:11-16).
On "judgment," see on
Isa 42:1.
4. fail--faint; man in religion may become as the almost
expiring flax-wick
(Isa 42:3),
but not so He in His purposes of grace.
-
discouraged--literally, "broken," that is, checked in zeal by
discouragements (compare
Isa 49:4, 5).
ROSENMULLER not so well translates, "He shall not
be too slow on the one hand, nor run too hastily on the other."
-
judgment--His true religion, the canon of His judgments and righteous
reign.
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isles . . . wait, &c.--The distant lands beyond sea shall put their
trust in His gospel way of salvation.
Mt 12:21
virtually gives the sense, with the inspired addition of another aspect
of the same thing, "In his name shall the Gentiles trust"
(as "wait for" here means,
Isa 30:18).
"His law" is not something distinct from Himself, but is indeed
Himself, the manifestation of God's character ("name") in
Christ, who is the embodiment of the law
(Isa 42:21;
Jer 23:6;
Ro 10:4).
"Isles" here, and in
Isa 42:12,
may refer to the fact that the populations of which the Church was
primarily formed were Gentiles of the countries bordering on the
Mediterranean.
5. Previously God had spoken of Messiah; now
(Isa 42:5-7)
He speaks to Him. To show to all that He is able to sustain the
Messiah in His appointed work, and that all might accept Messiah as
commissioned by such a mighty God, He commences by announcing Himself as
the Almighty Creator and Preserver of all things.
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spread . . . earth--
(Ps 136:6).
6. in righteousness--rather, "for a righteous purpose"
[LOWTH]. (See
Isa 42:21).
God "set forth" His Son "to be a propitiation (so as) to declare His
(God's) righteousness, that God might be just, and (yet) the
justifier of him which believeth in Jesus"
(Ro 3:25, 26;
compare see on
Isa 41:2;
Isa 45:13; 50:8, 9).
-
hold . . . hand--compare as to Israel, the type of Messiah,
Ho 11:3.
-
covenant--the medium of the covenant, originally made between God
and Abraham
(Isa 49:8).
"The mediator of a better covenant"
(Heb 8:6)
than the law (see
Isa 49:8;
Jer 31:33; 50:5).
So the abstract "peace," for peace-maker
(Mic 5:5;
Eph 2:14).
-
the people--Israel; as
Isa 49:8,
compared with
Isa 42:6,
proves
(Lu 2:32).
7. blind--spiritually
(Isa 42:16, 18, 19;
Isa 35:5;
Joh 9:39).
-
prison--
(Isa 61:1, 2).
-
darkness--opposed to "light"
(Isa 42:6;
Eph 5:8;
1Pe 2:9).
8. God turns from addressing Messiah to the people.
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Lord--JEHOVAH:
God's distinguishing and incommunicable name,
indicating essential being and immutable faithfulness (compare
Ex 6:3;
Ps 83:18; 96:5;
Ho 12:5).
-
my--that is due to Me, and to Me alone.
9. former things--Former predictions of God, which were now fulfilled,
are here adduced as proof that they ought to trust in Him alone as God;
namely, the predictions as to Israel's restoration from Babylon.
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new--namely, predictions as to Messiah, who is to bring all nations
to the worship of Jehovah
(Isa 42:1, 4, 6).
-
spring forth--The same image from plants
just beginning to germinate occurs in
Isa 43:19; 58:8.
Before there is the slightest indication to enable a sagacious
observer to infer the coming event, God foretells it.
10. new song--such as has never before been sung, called for by a new
manifestation of God's grace, to express which no hymn for former
mercies would be appropriate. The new song shall be sung when the Lord
shall reign in Jerusalem, and all "nations shall flow unto it"
(Isa 2:2; 26:1;
Re 5:9; 14:3).
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ye that go down to the sea--whose conversion will be the means of
diffusing the Gospel to distant lands.
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all . . . therein--all the living creatures that fill the sea
(Ps 96:11)
[MAURER]. Or, all sailors and voyagers
[GESENIUS]. But these were already mentioned in
the previous clause: there he called on all who go upon the sea;
in this clause all animals in the sea; so in
Isa 42:11,
he calls on the inanimate wilderness to lift up its voice. External
nature shall be so renovated as to be in unison with the moral
renovation.
11. cities--in a region not wholly waste, but mainly so, with an
oasis here and there.
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Kedar--in Arabia-Deserta
(Isa 21:16;
Ge 25:13).
The Kedarenians led a nomadic, wandering life. So Kedar is here put in
general for that class of men.
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rock--Sela, that is, Petra, the metropolis of Idumea and the
Nabathœan Ishmaelites. Or it may refer in general to those in
Arabia-Petræa, who had their dwellings cut out of the rock.
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the mountains--namely, of Paran, south of Sinai, in
Arabia-Petræa [VITRINGA].
12. glory . . . islands--
(Isa 24:15).
13-16. Jehovah will no longer restrain His wrath: He will go forth as
a mighty warrior
(Ex 15:3)
to destroy His people's and His enemies, and to deliver Israel (compare
Ps 45:3).
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stir up jealousy--rouse His indignation.
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roar--image from the battle cry of a warrior.
14. long time--namely, during the desolation of Israel
(Isa 32:14).
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holden my peace--(Compare
Ps 50:21;
Hab 1:2).
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cry like a travailing woman, &c.--Like a woman in parturition,
who, after having restrained her breathing for a time, at last,
overcome with labor pain, lets out her voice with a panting sigh; so
Jehovah will give full vent to His long pent-up wrath. Translate,
instead of "destroy . . . devour"; I will at once breathe
hard and pant, namely, giving loose to My wrath.
15. I will destroy all My foes.
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mountains--in Palestine usually planted with vines and olives in
terraces, up to their tops.
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islands--rather, "dry lands." %%%%