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Isaiah 44

The Lord Who Chose Jacob, Pours Out His Spirit, Blots Out Sin, and Names Cyrus

The Lord comforts Jacob His chosen servant by promising Spirit-wrought renewal, exposing idols as blind delusion, assuring Israel that He has blotted out sin and redeemed them, and declaring that even Cyrus will serve His purpose to restore Jerusalem and the temple.

Chapter Summary

The Lord comforts Jacob His chosen servant by promising Spirit-wrought renewal, exposing idols as blind delusion, assuring Israel that He has blotted out sin and redeemed them, and declaring that even Cyrus will serve His purpose to restore Jerusalem and the temple.

Overview

The chapter argues that the Lord alone can comfort, renew, forgive, redeem, and restore His people because He alone is Creator, King, Redeemer, first and last, Rock, Spirit-giver, and sovereign ruler over future events.

Context
Author

Isaiah son of Amoz

Audience

Judah and Jerusalem, especially the covenant people facing exile, idolatry, and the need for assurance that the Lord can restore what judgment has devastated.

Setting

The chapter speaks into the Babylonian exile-restoration horizon. It anticipates the restoration of Jerusalem and the temple, and explicitly identifies Cyrus as the Lord’s shepherd, preparing for the fuller Cyrus oracle in Isaiah 45.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

Isaiah 44 moves from comfort to Jacob-Israel as the Lord’s chosen servant, to the promise of water on dry ground and the Spirit poured out on offspring, to the Lord’s declaration that He is the first and the last with no God besides Him, to an extended satire exposing the foolishness of idol-making, to the call for Israel to remember that the Lord has redeemed them and swept away their sins, and finally to the Lord’s announcement that He frustrates false signs, confirms His servants’ words, restores Jerusalem, dries up the deep, and names Cyrus as His shepherd who will fulfill His pleasure.

Covenant Significance

Isaiah 44 confirms that Israel remains the Lord’s chosen servant after sin and exile. The Lord will renew the covenant people by His Spirit, forgive their sins, call them back to Himself, and restore Jerusalem and the temple through His appointed instrument.

Gospel Clarity

The gospel clarity in Isaiah 44 is that God saves by His own initiative: He chooses, forms, helps, pours out His Spirit, reveals Himself as the only God, exposes idols as lies, sweeps away sins, calls His people to return, and restores what judgment destroyed. In Christ, the Redeemer accomplishes forgiveness, pours out the Spirit, and forms a people who say, 'I belong to the Lord.'

Focus Points

  • Election and Servanthood
  • Spirit Outpouring
  • Covenant Identity
  • Exclusive Deity
  • The Lord as Redeemer
  • Idolatry Exposed
  • Spiritual Delusion
  • Forgiveness
  • Return
  • Cosmic Praise
  • Sovereignty Over History
  • Jerusalem and Temple Restoration
  • Jacob-Jeshurun is chosen by the Lord.
  • The Lord made and formed Israel, and He made all things by Himself.
  • The Lord promises to pour His Spirit on Israel’s offspring.
  • Renewed descendants confess that they belong to the Lord.
  • The Lord is the first and last; apart from Him there is no God.
  • The Lord repeatedly identifies Himself as Israel’s Redeemer.
  • Idols are worthless, human-made, powerless, deceptive, and unable to save.
  • Idolaters cannot see, understand, or recognize the lie they hold.
  • The Lord sweeps away offenses and sins like cloud and mist.
  • The Lord calls Israel to return because He has redeemed them.
  • The Lord names Cyrus and uses Him as shepherd to fulfill His pleasure.
  • The Lord frustrates false signs and confirms the word of His servants and messengers.
  • The Lord decrees Jerusalem’s habitation, Judah’s rebuilding, and the temple foundation.

Passages

Book Arc