Resource > Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable) >  Isaiah >  Exposition >  III. Israel's crisis of faith chs. 7--39 >  A. The choice between trusting God or Assyria chs. 7-12 >  3. Hope of God's deliverance 10:5-11:16 > 
Deliverance from Jesse's Shoot ch. 11 
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This section gives the positive side of the deliverance of God's people that is to come in contrast to the negative side (10:5-34). God would put Assyria down, but the Messiah would lift Israel up by serving her ideally. The messianic hope introduced at various points earlier in this major section (chs. 7-12) comes to full flower in chapter 11 (cf. 7:14; 8:23-9:6). Having promised Him, Isaiah now presented Messiah as ruling.

 The rule of the Shoot 11:1-9
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Messiah would meet certain qualifications (vv. 2-3a) and would rule with absolute justice (vv. 3b-5) with the result that people would live in peace (vv. 6-9)

11:1 The prophet had just described Assyria cut down like a forest of trees (10:15-19, 33-34). Likewise Israel would have only a remnant left after God finished judging her (10:20-23; cf. 6:11-13). Now he pictured a shoot sprouting from one of the stumps left after Israel's harvesting (cf. 4:2; 6:13; 53:1-2). A shoot would sprout from Jesse's family tree stump. The reference to humble Jesse rather than to glorious David stresses God's grace in providing a deliverer from a lowly family.132It also indicates that Messiah would be another David, not just a son of David, and that the house of David would lack royal dignity when Messiah came.

11:2 Clearly this shoot would be a person, and the qualities of God's Spirit would mark Him (cf. 61:1; Exod. 31:3; Judg. 14:6; 1 Sam. 10:10; 16:13; John 1:33-34; 3:34). They had not marked many of the Davidic kings thus far (cf. 2 Sam. 23:2-3), but the future ruler would enjoy divine enablement and would manifest supreme godliness. This sevenfold description presents Him as perfectly endowed by the Spirit with everything He needs to fulfill His kingly task.133An earlier Messiah passage (9:6) showed Him to be divine, but this one presents Him as dependent, "a combination that requires the Incarnation for its explanation."134

11:3 He would delight in the fear of the Lord, not just fear Him out of dread much less lack respect for Yahweh. He would make decisions on the basis of reality rather than appearances having the ability to see through issues. Such abilities demand more than a merely human ruler (cf. John 18:36-38).

11:4 Justice for the poor was hard to find in the ancient world because the poor could not afford to bribe their judges, and they possessed little political influence. But Israel's coming king would do what was right for the poor and be fair with the afflicted. His words of judgment would result in the death of the wicked rather than giving them preferential treatment for what they could do for the judge (cf. 55:10-11; Gen. 1:3; Heb. 4:12; 2 Thess. 2:8; Rev. 1:16; 19:15, 21). Clearly, this king will acknowledge God as His sovereign rather than people.

11:5 Righteousness and faithfulness (to God) would be His outstanding and determining characteristics. These were the marks of the Israelites' God (cf. 5:16; 65:16; Ps. 40:10; 119:75, 142; Zech. 8:8).

11:6-7 Security and safety would result from this king's rule. Whereas the conditions described may occur literally in the Millennium, Isaiah probably used them to represent those conditions figuratively. The rapacious will coexist peacefully with the defenseless. People least able to control wild things will be able to exercise effective leadership over them then.135In short, these conditions indicate a return to paradise on earth (cf. Gen. 1:28-30; Ps. 8; 1 Cor. 15:25-28; Heb. 2:5-9).136

11:8 In that day death itself will have lost its sting (cf. Hos. 13:14; 1 Cor. 15:55). People will have no fear of what is now fatal. The serpent will have been subdued (Gen. 3:15).

11:9 The enemies of humankind will not longer hurt or destroy people in God's holy mountain (kingdom, cf. 2:2-3) because everyone will know (relationally) the Lord (cf. Jer. 31:34).

 The return under the Shoot 11:10-16
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The rebellion of one Davidic king, Ahaz, would result in the defeat and dispersion of God's people (8:6-8), but the righteousness of another Davidic king, Messiah, would result in their revival and return to God and the Promised Land.

11:10 "In that day"points to the time when Messiah would rule (vv. 1-9). Then the Gentile nations would seek out the king who would represent His people, the Jews. This rules out the return from Babylonian exile as the fulfillment, and the rallying of all sorts of people around Christ as preached in the church age does not fit the picture either.137It must refer to a future worldwide turning to Messiah in which the Jews will be prominent (cf. Rom. 11). No resting place of Messiah was especially glorious during His first advent, but when He returns Jerusalem will become a glory because He will rule there.

The title "root of Jesse"presents the Messiah as the source of the Davidic line (cf. Gen. 3:15; 17:6), not just the product of that line (v. 1).

11:11 Then there will be a second regathering of the Israelites to the Promised Land from all over the world. The first regathering happened under Zerubbabel, Nehemiah, and Ezra.138Assyrian and Babylonian sovereigns might defeat and disperse the Jews, but the ultimate sovereign, Messiah, will restore and reassemble them.

11:12 The standard He lifts up for the nations is the flag of His kingdom; His will be an earthly kingdom. He will assemble under this banner a remnant of Jews from both the Northern and the Southern Kingdoms who will live all over the earth then.139

11:13-14 Internal strife among the tribes will cease. Instead of fighting among themselves the Israelites will subdue their common enemies and gain the whole Promised Land. Evidently this conflict will precede the peace pictured in verses 6-9.

11:15-16 God will defeat Israel's ancient enemies, Egypt and Babylonia. His judgments on them will involve the drying up of major barriers, the Red Sea and the Euphrates River (cf. Exod. 14:21; Rev. 16:12). This judgment will allow the Jews to return to the Promised Land from those parts of the world unhindered. They will be able to leave the territory of Assyria, where God had said He would send them captive, as easily as their forefathers left Egypt and crossed the Red Sea in the Exodus. Breaking the Euphrates into seven streams may connote a perfect and complete re-creation by God.

Thus this section of the book dealing with the hope of God's deliverance (10:5-11:16) culminates in the reign of Messiah on the earth. Israel will regather in the Promised Land from all over the world trusting in God. The Gentiles too will acknowledge His sovereignty, which both they and His own people have forever resisted.



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