Isaiah 59:16-21
The Lord Himself brings redemption.
Scripture Text
59:16 He saw that there was no man, and wondered that there was no intercessor. Therefore His own arm brought salvation to Him; and His righteousness sustained Him.
59:17 He put on righteousness as a breastplate, and a helmet of salvation on His head. He put on garments of vengeance for clothing, and was clad with zeal as a mantle.
59:18 According to their deeds, He will repay as appropriate, wrath to His adversaries, recompense to His enemies; He will repay the islands their due.
59:19 So they will fear Yahweh’s name from the west, and His glory from the rising of the sun; for He will come as a rushing stream, which Yahweh’s breath drives.
59:20 “A Redeemer will come to Zion, and to those who turn from disobedience in Jacob,” says Yahweh.
59:21 “As for me, this is my covenant with them,” says Yahweh. “My Spirit who is on You, and my words which I have put in Your mouth shall not depart out of Your mouth, nor out of the mouth of Your offspring, nor out of the mouth of Your offspring’s offspring,” says Yahweh, “from now on and forever.”
The Lord Himself brings redemption.
Seeing the absence of justice, the Lord Himself acts in righteousness to bring salvation and establish an everlasting covenant.
God’s people must stop treating distance from God as a mystery when sin is being tolerated. But they must also stop despairing, because the Lord Himself comes as Redeemer where no human intercessor can save.
- 59:1 The Lord is not too weak to save or too deaf to hear.
- 59:2 The people’s iniquities and sins have separated them from God.
- 59:3–8 Violence, lies, injustice, schemes, crooked paths, and no peace define the people’s condition.
- 59:9–15a The community acknowledges darkness, blindness, guilt, rebellion, falsehood, and the collapse of truth.
- 59:15b–19 The Lord sees the absence of justice and brings salvation by His own arm as divine warrior.
- 59:20–21 The Redeemer comes to repentant Zion and establishes His Spirit and word across generations.
From correcting the false assumption that the Lord is unable to save, to exposing sin as the barrier, to detailing violent and deceitful injustice, to confessing darkness and guilt, to the Lord seeing the absence of justice, to His divine warrior intervention, to the Redeemer coming to Zion and establishing His Spirit and words forever.
Isaiah 59 argues that the people’s separation from God is caused by sin, not divine inability. Their injustice and falsehood produce darkness and no peace. Yet when no human mediator can repair the ruin, the Lord Himself intervenes as righteous warrior and Redeemer, bringing salvation, judgment, and covenant permanence through His Spirit and word.
Theological logic
- The LORD is able and willing to save and hear.
- Sin creates separation from God.
- Sin corrupts body, speech, justice, imagination, and community life.
- Wickedness cannot produce peace.
- The community’s condition must be confessed, not excused.
- Truth collapses when rebellion is normalized.
- Human society cannot rescue itself from this moral collapse.
- The LORD himself provides the salvation no human can produce.
- The LORD’s salvation includes judgment against enemies and evil.
- The LORD’s redemptive work culminates in a covenant of Spirit and word.
- Do not portray divine vengeance as arbitrary cruelty.
- Avoid separating redemption from repentance.
- Do not detach warrior imagery from covenant justice.
- Resist minimizing the enduring presence of Spirit and word.
- Do not overlook the global scope of God’s saving purpose.
- When human ability fails, believers must trust in God's power to save and restore.
- God's covenant faithfulness extends across generations through His Spirit and word.
- The presence of God's Spirit and word is essential for sustaining faith and obedience.
- God's justice and salvation should produce reverence and proclamation among all peoples.
- Sin diagnosis - Before blaming God’s silence, examine whether sin is being cherished, hidden, or excused.
- Speech integrity - Refuse lies, exaggerations, manipulations, slander, and empty arguments.
- Path examination - Ask whether daily decisions are straight paths of peace or crooked paths of self-protection.
- Corporate confession - Learn to confess 'our sins' where shared patterns of injustice or falsehood exist.
- Truth protection - Defend truth in the street, not only in private conviction.
- Redeemer dependence - Pray and act from dependence on the Lord’s arm rather than confidence in human self-rescue.
- Repentant reception - Turn from transgression as the fitting response to the Redeemer who comes to Zion.
- Spirit-and-word transmission - Embed Scripture and dependence on the Spirit in family, church, teaching, counseling, and discipleship.
- Chapter Summary : Human sin separates the people from God and destroys justice, but the Lord Himself comes as warrior-Redeemer to bring salvation, judge evil, and establish His covenant word and Spirit among the repentant.
Isaiah 59:16-21 proclaims that the Lord Himself brings salvation when no human can. The gospel reveals that in Christ God acts as Redeemer, defeating evil and establishing an everlasting covenant by His Spirit.