Verse of the Day
Author Spotlight
Loading featured author...
Report Issue
See a formatting issue or error?
Let us know →
But there Yahweh will be with us in majesty, a place of broad rivers and streams, in which shall go no galley with oars, neither shall gallant ship pass thereby.
Verse Takeaways
1
God is Our River
Scholars explain that ancient Jerusalem, unlike great cities like Babylon or Nineveh, lacked a major river for defense and commerce. Isaiah uses the powerful metaphor of "broad rivers and streams" to describe God's majestic presence. His presence would be the city's true source of life, prosperity, and beauty, supplying every need that a physical river would.
See 3 Verse Takeaways
Book Overview
Isaiah
Author
Audience
Composition
Teaching Highlights
Outline
+ 5 more
See Overview
6
18th Century
Presbyterian
But there - In Jerusalem; or in His church, of which Jerusalem was the emblem.
The glorious Lord - Lowth renders it, ‘The glor…
19th Century
Anglican
A place of broad rivers and streams ... —Better, rivers and canals. The bold imagery has its starting-point in what the p…
16th Century
Protestant
Because there the mighty Jehovah will be to us. The two particles כי ים (ki im) often serve as a double affirmative, but here a reason is …
Go ad-free and create your own bookmark library
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
But there the glorious Lord [will be] unto us a place of broad rivers [and] streams E…
The true believer watches against all occasions of sin. The Divine power will keep him safe, and his faith in that power will keep him at ease. He …
13th Century
Catholic
1. Woe to you who plunder. In this part, the prophet begins to foretell the destruction of Israel’s enemies. This is presented in t…
Get curated content & updates