Isaiah 19:12
A focused desk for reading, commentary, cross-references, original language notes, and your own observations.
Isaiah 19:12
12 Where are they? where are thy wise men? and let them tell thee now, and let them know what the LORD of hosts hath purposed upon Egypt.
Chapter Context
Isaiah 19 is a prophetic oracle chapter in the Old Testament that explores themes of grace, judgment, covenant. Written during the Assyrian and pre-exilic periods (c. 740-680 BCE), this chapter should be understood within its historical context: Addressed Judah during Assyria's rise, Babylon's threat, and anticipated restoration.
The chapter can be divided into several sections:
- Verses 1-5: Introduction and setting the context
- Verses 6-12: Development of key themes
- Verses 13-20: Central message and teachings
- Verses 21-25: Conclusion and application
This chapter is significant because it provides essential context for understanding God's covenant relationship with His people. When studying this passage, it's important to consider both its immediate context within Isaiah and its broader place in the scriptural canon.
Verse Study
Isaiah 19:12
12 Where are they? where are thy wise men? and let them tell thee now, and let them know what the LORD of hosts hath purposed upon Egypt.
Analysis
'Where are they? where are thy wise men? and let them tell thee now, and let them know what the LORD of hosts hath purposed upon Egypt.' God challenges Egypt: let their wise men explain divine purposes. The repeated 'where are they?' indicates absence or futility—either the wise men don't exist, or they're incompetent to understand God's plans. This sarcastic challenge demonstrates that human wisdom can't comprehend divine purposes without revelation. Egypt's counselors, despite education and tradition, cannot 'know what the LORD of hosts hath purposed'—they lack access to divine counsel. Only revealed knowledge provides genuine understanding of God's purposes. This anticipates Paul's teaching that God's wisdom appears as foolishness to worldly wisdom, yet worldly wisdom cannot grasp divine purposes (1 Corinthians 1:18-25; 2:14). True knowledge requires divine revelation, not merely human reasoning.
Historical Context
Throughout history, Egyptian counselors couldn't accurately predict or prevent national crises. Despite elaborate divination systems (reading animal entrails, astrology, dream interpretation), they failed to foresee invasions, famines, or political collapses. In contrast, Isaiah accurately prophesied specific events through divine revelation—Assyria's victories, Egypt's failures, Jerusalem's deliverance. This empirically validated revealed knowledge's superiority over human wisdom traditions. Church history shows this pattern continuing: secular philosophies and worldviews repeatedly fail to explain reality or guide societies successfully, while biblical revelation provides accurate understanding of human nature, history's trajectory, and ultimate purposes. Revelation trumps speculation.
Reflection
- What does the challenge to Egypt's wise men teach about revealed versus speculative knowledge?
- How does inability to know God's purposes demonstrate human wisdom's limits?
- Why is divine revelation necessary for genuine understanding of history and reality?
Word Studies
- Lord: יְהוָה / אֲדֹנָי (YHWH / Adonai) H3068 - The LORD / Lord
Cross-References
- Parallel theme: 1 Corinthians 1:20