Bible Commentary

Isaiah 48:9

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:9

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

For my Name's sake will I defer mine anger. Israel's insincerity (), obstinacy (), addiction to idols (), blindness (), and general resistance to God's will (), could not but have provoked God's "anger."

He will, however, "defer" it, "refrain" himself, not "cut Israel off, for his Name's sake." God, having selected one nation out of all the nations of the earth to be his "peculiar people" (), and having declared this, and supported his people by miracles in their struggles with the other nations and peoples, was, so to speak, committed to protect and defend Israel "for his Name's sake," lest his Name should be blasphemed among the Gentiles (see ; ; ; :10; , etc.

). He was also bound by the promises which he had made; and. still more, by the position which Israel occupied in his scheme of salvation, to allow the nation still to exist, and therefore to condone its iniquities and restrain his anger.

But the dregs of the cup of vengeance were poured out at last.

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commentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:1-9Things worth heeding concerning God and man. "Hear ye this:" this is something well worth the earnest attention of men; their truest worth and their lasting interests are bound up in the knowledge and regard of it. I. M…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:1-11"Hear ye this," etc.; Isaiah 48:12-15, "Hearken unto me," etc.; Isaiah 48:16-22, "Come ye near unto me, hear ye this," etc.Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:1-11Lessons from the past to the future. Those addressed are the people "named from Israel and sprung from Judah's spring;" who swear by Jehovah's Name and render homage to Israel's God—not, alas! so sincerely as they shoul…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:1-22EXPOSITION The present chapter, which terminates the second section of Isaiah's later prophecies, consists of a long address by God to his people, partly in the way of complaint, partly of combined premise and exhortati…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:1-11THE FIRST ADDRESS consists mainly of expostulation and complaint. Israel has not called on God "in truth and righteousness" (Isaiah 48:1). They have had "necks of iron" and "brows of brass" (Isaiah 48:4). God has given…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryMatthew Henry on Isaiah 48:9-15We have nothing ourselves to plead with God, why he should have mercy upon us. It is for his praise, to the honour of his mercy, to spare. His bringing men into trouble was to do them good. It was to refine them, but no…Matthew HenrycommentaryEncouragement to God's People. (b. c. 708.)ENCOURAGEMENT TO GOD'S PEOPLE. (B. C. 708.) The deliverance of God's people out of their captivity in Babylon was a thing upon many accounts so improbable that there was need of line upon line for the encouragement of t…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 48:9God's supreme motive. "For my Name's sake I defer mine anger, and for my praise I am temperate towards thee, not to cut thee off" (Cheyne's translation). It may seem strange that God did not utterly destroy the Jews as…Joseph S. Exell and contributors