Isaiah 58
Garner-HowesIsaiah 58:1-5
ISAIAH - CHAPTER 58 THE OF JEHOVAH TO A PEOPLE (Isaiah 58:1 to Isaiah 66:24)
FOR DIVINE AND In this final section of Isaiah’s prophecy considerable stress is laid on practical righteousness, (comp. Romans 12:2; James 1:25-26). Outward conformity to religious rules and regulations, without the devotion, adoration, and worship of a loving and joyful heart, is not acceptable before God. Until the heart-attitude toward God is right ALL ELSE IS FUTILE! Vs. 1-3b: SIN MUST BE
- Here, as in 40:1 and 49:1, is a two-fold command wherein Isaiah is to “cry out” against the sins of His people (vs. 1); their rejection is the just reward of their faithlessness, (Isaiah 50:1; Isaiah 59:12).
- Their actions are ritualistic and hypocritical (vs. 2) - outward; not from the heart. a. With brazeness they enter God’s courts as though they delight to know His ways, (comp. Isaiah 1:11; Titus 1:16). b. They act as if they were a righteous nation that had never forsaken the law of its God, (Isaiah 1:4; Isaiah 48:1; Isaiah 59:13; Jeremiah 7:8-11). c. Outwardly, they show great delight in drawing near to God, and ask Him to deal righteously with them, (Isaiah 29:13).
- They have even dared complain of Jehovah’s ! (vs. 3). a. He has not seen their fastings - which were certainly designed to impress Him, (Malachi 3:14; Luke 18:12). b. Nor has He taken knowledge of their humility, wherein they afflicted their own souls - such as, they thought, should obligate Him to bestow special favor upon them. c. Fools still imagine that, somehow, they can obligate God by self-prescribed pieties designed to win the commendation of men! Vs. 3c-5: CAN THEY VIEW THIS AS TRUE FASTING?
- God answers their complaint: He has not been pleased with them because they have PLEASED , while oppressing those who served them (vs. 3c; Romans 15:1-3; Isaiah 3:13-15) - extorting from them a full days’ labor, which was contrary to the law, (Leviticus 16:29).
- This self-prescribed fasting of theirs only made them quarrelsome; it was not such as to make their voice heard on high, (vs. 4; Isaiah 59:2; Isaiah 59:6; Joe 2:12-14).
- How could they imagine that God would be pleased with such a mechanical fast as theirs - one which used their religion as an instrument for oppression? (vs. 5).
Isaiah 58:6-12
Vs. 6-9a: THE REWARD OF TRUE
- The fast that the Lord chooses involves opposite characteristics from those manifested in Israel; It will break every enslaving yoke of wickedness, so that the oppressed may go free, (vs. 6; Isaiah 1:19; Nehemiah 5:10-12; Jeremiah 34:8-9; comp. Acts 8:21-23).
- Verse 7 sets forth the ACTION of a true fast, (Ezekiel 18:5-9). a. It will feed the hungry, (vs. 10a; comp. Job 31:19-23). b. It will provide a home for the outcast, (Hebrews 13:2; comp. Isaiah 16:3-4). c. It will clothe the naked, (Matthew 25:34-36; Luke 3:11). d. Nor will it hide itself from the needs of one’s own flesh and blood, (Deuteronomy 22:1-4; comp. 1 Timothy 5:8). Vs. 9b-12:
- Again, Isaiah reminds the people of God that fellowship with the Most High requires them to renounce and put away such things as are contrary to His holiness, (vs. 9b); specifically, this involves: slavery, bribery and perjury, (Isaiah 59:13).
- Then (vs. 10) he reiterates the necessity of unselfish care for others - bestowing on the hungry that which would be a delight to themselves (vs. 7; Deuteronomy 15:7-8) - with the promise that their light shall arise in obscurity, and their darkness shall be turned into noon-day brightness, (vs. 8; Isaiah 42:16; Psalms 37:5-6).
- Thus would they enjoy perpetual blessings from the Almighty, (vs. 11). a. Jehovah will be their constant guide, (Isaiah 49:10; Isaiah 57:18). b. Their souls will be satisfied - even in the midst of drought and barrenness, (Isaiah 41:17; Psalms 107:9). c. Divinely strengthened, they will become effective instruments in the accomplishment of God’s purpose, (Isaiah 66:14). d. The effect of the Spirit’s being poured out upon them is likened to a watered garden and a fountain of water that never fails, (Isaiah 27:2-3; Jeremiah 31:12; John 4:14; John 7:37-38). e. All this is available NOW - not to Israel only, but to ALL who will trust in the Lord and yield their lives to His service.
- Great indeed will be the glory of those who restore and rebuild the Holy City, (vs. 12; Isaiah 49:8; Isaiah 61:4; Ezekiel 36:10-11; Amos 9:11-12).
Isaiah 58:13-14
Vs. 13-14: RESPECT FOR THE SABBATH TO ISRAEL’S
- The fourth commandment (Exodus 20:8) was always an important cornerstone in the life of Israel - whether they remembered it or not. a. The Sabbath was designed for man’s good - physical and spiritual, (Mark 2:27; Exodus 23:12; Deuteronomy 5:14-15). b. Judah’s failure to observe certain sabbath-responsibilities was a basic factor leading to her 70-year captivity in Babylon, (2Ch Isaiah 36:20-21). c. One’s attitude toward the sabbath, which God ordained, manifests his real attitude toward God Himself! d. The true “rest” of New Testament saints is found in a Person - Jesus Christ, the Son of God, (Hebrews 4:9; Matthew 11:28-29).
- If Israel would truly seek to honor the Lord (with regard to His appointed sabbaths), instead of seeking her own pleasure, then the Lord would marvelously bless her, (vs. 13-14). a. She would learn the blessedness of joying IN THE LORD HIMSELF! (vs. 14a; comp. Romans 5:2-3; Romans 5:11). b. The Lord would then exalt her in the earth - enabling her to feast on the convenanted heritage of her father Jacob, (vs. 14b; Genesis 27:28-29; Genesis 28:13-15). c. Such is the word of Jehovah Himself - whose promise NEVER FAILS! (vs. 14c; comp. Isaiah 1:20; Isaiah 40:5; Joshua 23:14).
