Bible Commentary

Isaiah 50:1-3

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1-3

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

Explanation of exile.

The Lord would impress on his exiled people that their calamities found their explanation not in him but in themselves; and we shall find, when we look, that this is the account of our estrangement and distance from God.

I. WHAT ACCOUNTED FOR ISRAEL'S EXILE?

1. It was not any fickleness in God. He had not acted toward Israel as a husband often acted toward the wife of whom he was weary; there had been no changeableness on his part.

2. It was not his necessity. The father might sell his son when hard pressed by pecuniary straits; but God could never, by any supposition, be reduced to such necessities. He who can say, "Every beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle upon a thousand hills," the generous Donor of all gifts, and bountiful Source of all treasures, cannot be in want of anything.

3. It is not his inability to protect or to redeem. There was abundance of Divine power to preserve from captivity or to rescue from it. He who could "dry up the [Red] sea," and in whose hand are the storms and tempests of the sky, could defeat any armies of the invader, or could bring out of bondage, if he chose.

4. It was their own disobedience which accounted for it—their iniquities, their transgressions (); it was their heedlessness and disobedience when the voice of the Lord was heard rebuking and inviting ().

II. WHAT ACCOUNTS FOR OUR ALIENATION FROM GOD?

1. Nothing in him. He is not unwilling that we should return and be reconciled; he does not weary of his children; he has been obliged to condemn us, but he "earnestly remembers us still." His attitude is one of gracious invitation: all the days of our life long he "stretches out his hands" toward us. He is not unable. The power which God shows in nature, in his control of the elements, in regulating the tides of the sea, and directing the tempest in the sky, is small and slight in comparison with that he shows in redeeming a fallen race; mechanical or miraculous power is of a far inferior kind to that which is moral and spiritual. And the Author of nature is the Redeemer of man; he has completed a glorious work of mercy and restoration. He has made it possible for the most guilty to be forgiven, for the foulest to be cleansed, for the most distant to return. There is no obstacle to our restoration in God.

2. Everything in us. We "will not come unto him that we may have life." (l) We do not listen when he speaks; we go on our way, regardless of the fact that God is speaking in his Word, in the sanctuary by Jesus Christ, in his providence.

Recommended reading

More for Isaiah 50:1-3

Continue with other commentaries and DiscipleDeck content connected to this verse, chapter, or topic.

Other commentaries

Matthew Henry on Isaiah 50:1-3Isaiah 50:1-3 · Matthew Henry Concise CommentaryThose who have professed to be people of God, and seem to be dealt severely with, are apt to complain, as if God had been hard with them. Here is an answer for such murmurings; God never deprived any of their advantages…Expostulations with Israel. (b. c. 706.)Isaiah 50:1-3 · Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole BibleEXPOSTULATIONS WITH ISRAEL. (B. C. 706.) Those who have professed to be the people of God, and yet seem to be dealt severely with, are apt to complain of God, and to lay the fault upon him, as if he had been hard with t…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1-11Isaiah 50:1-11 · The Pulpit CommentaryEXPOSITION This chapter seems to be made up of short fragments, which the collector, or collectors, of Isaiah's writings regarded as too precious to be lost, and which they consequently here threw together, though in re…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1Isaiah 50:1 · The Pulpit CommentaryWhere is the bill of your mother's divorcement? On account of her persistent "backsliding," God had "put away Israel," Judah's sister, and had "given her a bill of divorce" (Isaiah 3:8). But he had not repudiated Judah;…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1Isaiah 50:1 · The Pulpit CommentarySelling ourselves. "For your iniquities have ye sold yourselves." Reference is to the right which fathers in the East possessed, of selling their children into slavery; and also to the power of judges to condemn malefac…
commentaryMatthew Henry on Isaiah 50:1-3Those who have professed to be people of God, and seem to be dealt severely with, are apt to complain, as if God had been hard with them. Here is an answer for such murmurings; God never deprived any of their advantages…Matthew HenrycommentaryExpostulations with Israel. (b. c. 706.)EXPOSTULATIONS WITH ISRAEL. (B. C. 706.) Those who have professed to be the people of God, and yet seem to be dealt severely with, are apt to complain of God, and to lay the fault upon him, as if he had been hard with t…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1-11EXPOSITION This chapter seems to be made up of short fragments, which the collector, or collectors, of Isaiah's writings regarded as too precious to be lost, and which they consequently here threw together, though in re…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1Where is the bill of your mother's divorcement? On account of her persistent "backsliding," God had "put away Israel," Judah's sister, and had "given her a bill of divorce" (Isaiah 3:8). But he had not repudiated Judah;…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:1Selling ourselves. "For your iniquities have ye sold yourselves." Reference is to the right which fathers in the East possessed, of selling their children into slavery; and also to the power of judges to condemn malefac…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:2Wherefore, when I came, was there no man? Such being the condition of things; Judah having rejected me, not I them—why, "when I came" and announced deliverance from Babylon, was there no response? Why did no champion ap…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 50:3I clothe the heavens with blackness. The Egyptian plague of darkness (Exodus 10:21-23) is not adequate to the expressions here used. God means to assert his power of leaving all nature in absolute darkness, if he so cho…Joseph S. Exell and contributors