Read & Study the Bible Online - Bible Portal
John Calvin

Geneva Study Bible - Isaiah 64:11

64:11 Our holy and our beautiful house, {m} where our fathers praised thee, is burned with fire: and all our pleasant things are laid waste.(m) In which we rejoiced and worshipped you. read more

James Gray

James Gray's Concise Bible Commentary - Isaiah 64:1-12

MEETING OF THE AGES We are drawing to the end of the present, and the opening of the Millennial age. The prophet’s eye rests on the time when Israel is back in her land, the majority still unconverted to Christ and worshiping in a restored temple. There is a faithful remnant waiting for Him, though enduring the persecution of the false christ. This persecution may often be felt at the hands of their own brethren after the flesh. These facts must be assumed in the interpretation of these... read more

Joseph Parker

The People's Bible by Joseph Parker - Isaiah 64:1-12

The Heart's Cry Isa 64:1 The heart must have its time for speech as well as the cold and foolish intellect. The intellect is always a fool when it is not held in check by the heart, in the consideration of all pious, moral, and beneficent questions. There are many persons who are much afraid of changing the solar system. They tell us that when we pray to God to give us a fine day we ask God to change for the time being the whole construction of the solar system; and some persons can never... read more

Robert Hawker

Hawker's Poor Man's Commentary - Isaiah 64:8-12

How beautiful is the connection between the opening and close of this prayer, and indeed the whole, of the Chapter from beginning to end! Surely, every faithful follower of the Lord Jesus, who knows himself to be, in himself, what this prayer expresseth; and desires, in that conviction to lie as clay in the hand of the potter, will look up, in and through the Lord Jesus, and the fullness of his propitiation and advocacy, and rest in humble waitings oh the Lord, until the hour of deliverance... read more

George Haydock

George Haydock's Catholic Bible Commentary - Isaiah 64:10

Desolate, under Antiochus Epiphanes, 1 Machabees i. 31., and iv. 38. (Calmet) read more

Matthew Henry

Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary on the Bible - Isaiah 64:6-12

6-12 The people of God, in affliction, confess and bewail their sins, owning themselves unworthy of his mercy. Sin is that abominable thing which the Lord hates. Our deeds, whatever they may seem to be, if we think to merit by them at God's hand, are as rags, and will not cover us; filthy rags, and will but defile us. Even our few good works in which there is real excellence, as fruits of the Spirit, are so defective and defiled as done by us, that they need to be washed in the fountain open... read more

Frank Binford Hole

F. B. Hole's Old and New Testament Commentary - Isaiah 64:4-12

Isa_64:4 Isa_65:12 It is striking how verse Isa_64:4 follows what we have dwelt upon in the first three verses. Isaiah desired a mighty display of the power of God such as had been manifested at the outset of Israel's history: yet he was conscious that God had in reserve things beyond all human knowledge, and prepared for those who waited for Him to act. To this verse the Apostle Paul referred in 1Co_2:9 , showing that though in ordinary matters men arrive at knowledge by the hearing of the... read more

Paul E. Kretzmann

The Popular Commentary by Paul E. Kretzmann - Isaiah 64:5-12

An Appeal to Jehovah to Forsake His Wrath v. 5. Thou meetest, in a friendly and kindly manner, him that rejoiceth and worketh righteousness, happy in observing the covenant faithfulness, those that remember Thee in Thy ways, doing His will with joyful willingness. Behold, Thou art wroth, He became angry, for we have sinned. In those is continuance, the persistence in sin being a punishment in itself, and we shall be saved, or, "how could we have been saved?" The people having hardened... read more

Johann Peter Lange

Lange's Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Critical, Doctrinal and Homiletical - Isaiah 64:1-12

3. PRAYER THAT THE LORD WOULD VISIBLY INTERVENE, AND SO PROVE HIMSELF TO BE, AS OF OLD, THE GOD AND FATHERr OF ISRAELIsaiah 63:19 b to Isaiah 64:11. (Isaiah 64:1-12)Chap Isaiah 63:19 b. Oh that thou wouldest rend the heavens,That thou wouldest come down,That the mountains might flow down at thy presence,Chap Isaiah 64:1          As when 17 18the melting fire burneth,The fire causeth the waters to boil,To make thy name known to thine adversaries,That the nations may tremble at thy... read more

Frederick Brotherton Meyer

F.B. Meyer's 'Through the Bible' Commentary - Isaiah 64:1-12

a Cry for Pardon Isaiah 64:1-12 The great past , Isaiah 64:1-5 . We are introduced to the prophet’s oratory and hear the outpourings of his heart. As he recalls the story of bygone days, he asks that God would do as He had done. It is as easy for God to rend the heavens as for us to tear a piece of cloth: and great mountains of difficulty dissolve before Him, as a pyramid of snow in a thaw. God works while we wait. When there is no sign of His help, He is hastening toward us. If you go out... read more

Group of Brands