Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk (2024)

Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk (1)

August 2019

by H.P. McCracken

Feature Article

Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk (2)

August 2019

Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk (3)

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An elder in my congregation often quips, “They say as you get older, short-term memory is the second thing to go; I can’t remember what the first thing is.” Christians will agree that a finite memory that weakens with age and can even be distorted by sin is common to humanity. But when in Isaiah 43:25 God says, “I will not remember your sins,” how are we to understand God’s memory? There are a few reasons why we should not interpret this verse to mean that God literally forgets, though it does teach an important and wonderful truth.

Analogical Language

Throughout the Bible, our infinite God reveals Himself by means of analogical language. These are figurative rather than literal descriptions of God to accommodate our limited language and finite understanding as humans. In this way, the Bible attributes human actions to God, such as smelling (Gen. 8:21), hearing (Ex. 2:24), sitting (Ps. 9:7), and coming down (Mic. 1:3). Human emotions such as regretful sorrow (Gen. 6:6) and jealousy (Ex. 20:5) also serve to teach us by analogy something of what God is like. Though God does not have a body, the Bible speaks of His hand (Ps. 118:15) and eyes (Prov. 15:3). With the language of human occupations or relationships, He is described as a husband (Isa. 54:5), father (Deut. 32:6), king (Isa. 44:6), and shepherd (Ps. 23:1). God’s remembering (Gen. 9:15) and forgetting should be interpreted as such analogical language.

God’s Nature

Rising from the conviction that God’s infallible Word is not contradictory at any point, the “analogy of faith” is an important principle in biblical interpretation that directs us to let clearer and nonfigurative passages of Scripture interpret less clear and figurative ones. God’s “forgetting” cannot be literal memory loss, equivalent to my forgetting math formulas from high school, because this contradicts what the Bible teaches about God’s omniscience, His total and perfect knowledge. We are told that “his understanding is beyond measure” (Ps. 147:5) and that He declares “the end from the beginning” (Isa. 46:10). It is against God’s nature literally to forget anything.

If God does not literally forget our sins, what does Isaiah 43:25 mean? We should understand this description of God to be covenantal language by which He assures His people of the complete forgiveness of their sins.

Covenant Language

If God does not literally forget our sins, what does Isaiah 43:25 mean? We should understand this description of God to be covenantal language by which He assures His people of the complete forgiveness of their sins. Immediately before verse 25, God had reminded His people of their unfaithfulness and false worship, concluding, “You have wearied me with your iniquities” (vv. 22–24). Yet chapter 43 is part of a larger section in Isaiah, beginning in chapter 40, in which God is largely communicating comfort and assurance to His people. He tells them in 43:1–4, 15:

Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are mine. ... For I am the LORD your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior. ... You are precious in my eyes, and honored, and I love you.

These assurances communicate the covenant relationship into which God has brought Israel, despite their sin. Then, in verse 25, God says, “I, I am he who blots out your transgressions for my own sake, and I will not remember your sins.” In emphasizing that He does this “for my sake,” God again points to His gracious covenant. It is not because of their worthiness but because of His pure grace and love for them that He takes away their sins.

Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk (4)

In two figurative descriptions, this verse assures Israel how fully and finally their sins are forgiven. First, blotting out is the language of wiping away something written. Israel’s sins, each an offense against God deserving judgment, are pictured as having been written in a book, but He has erased all of them. They can no longer be read and used to accuse God’s people. Second, God assures Israel that their sins are as good as forgotten. God will never again bring them up and hold them against His people. God in the Bible uses several such images to emphasize how complete and final His forgiveness and its benefits are. He speaks of covering over our sins (Ps. 32:1), removing them as far as east is from west (103:12), and casting them into the depths of the sea (Mic. 7:19).

The rest of the Scriptures reveal how it is that God can have such a covenant relationship with sinful people, how He can “forget” their sins. It is not because of a memory lapse, nor is it a trite idiom. It is because God sent His Son to bear all the sins of His people and to die in their place on the cross, erasing the guilt of His people’s sins and making them as if they were forgotten forever in our relationship with Him.

Rev. H.P. McCracken is pastor of Salt & Light Reformed Presbyterian Church in Longmont, CO.

Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk (2024)

FAQs

Isaiah 43:25 | Tabletalk? ›

Then, in verse 25, God says, “I, I am he who blots out your transgressions for my own sake, and I will not remember your sins.” In emphasizing that He does this “for my sake,” God again points to His gracious covenant.

What does 43/25 mean? ›

In the earlier chapters of the book, God pronounces judgment on Israel for their disobedience and idolatry. However, in this verse, God offers a message of hope and forgiveness to his people. The context of Isaiah 43:25 is a promise from God to forgive and restore his people, even though they have sinned against him.

What does blotted out mean in the Bible? ›

This idiom, first recorded in 1516, uses the verb to blot in the sense of making something illegible by spotting or staining it with ink. The New Testament has it (Acts 3:19): “Repent ye ... that your sins may be blotted out.”

What are the three ways God makes all things new? ›

As I begin this new year, I'm committing to hope in God's power to make things new. He restores lost time, bestows new identities, and creates new life.

What does it mean when God says he is doing a new thing? ›

When He does a new thing, it is not something He has not done before. Instead, He is refreshing our reality with new hope and life. His action is not random, reactive, or unmeasured. Instead, when He does something new, it is always rooted in His eternal, unchanging nature and our identity as His children.

What does Isaiah 43-25 teach us? ›

Then, in verse 25, God says, “I, I am he who blots out your transgressions for my own sake, and I will not remember your sins.” In emphasizing that He does this “for my sake,” God again points to His gracious covenant.

What is Isaiah 43 talking about? ›

It is this last role of redeemer that God speaks of in Isaiah 43. God insists that Israel should not fear, because God has redeemed (the verb form of goel) them (Isaiah 43:1). And then God goes on to claim Israel as God's own and calls them by name. I understand the calling by name as a marking of familiar intimacy.

Who was punished in the Bible for ejacul*ting out? ›

Biblical account

When Onan had sex with Tamar, he withdrew before he ejacul*ted and "spilled his seed on the ground" thus committing coitus interuptus, since any child born would not legally be considered his heir. The next statement in the Bible says that Onan displeased Yahweh, so the Lord slew him.

What is another word for "blot out"? ›

to destroy all traces of blotted out all evidence of tampering with the explosive device. eradicate. erase. abolish. wipe out.

What is the meaning of blotted it out? ›

1. : to make obscure, insignificant, or inconsequential. 2. : wipe out, destroy.

What 3 things does God require of us? ›

Micah 6:8 is a clear, crisp, and simple summary of what God expects from you and me. These three things that matter so much to God are the three things God wants to see in us: justice, kindness, and humility. To act justly is to treat people fairly and respectfully.

What are the three things God wants you to do? ›

We cannot hope to appease God by working our way into righteousness, nor sacrificing others for our own sin. Instead, Micah listed out the three principles of what God asks of His people: to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with Him.

What happens when God restores you? ›

Restoration is the spiritual alignment that comes when we turn to God, when we call on Jesus as Savior. God brings us back to him first, like in Ezekiel 36:26, he gives us a new heart and new spirit first. Then God speaks of the land and fruit, material items.

When God makes you start over? ›

God sees all of time from beginning to end, and He tells us the same thing He told Israel back then: “Forget the former things, do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing!” (Isaiah 43:18-19). Starting over is never easy. But give your concerns to the Lord.

What must I do for God to do a new thing in my life? ›

If you need a new thing in your life, grab a hold of these lessons.
  • One – Forget the former things – don't dwell on the past.
  • Two – God is doing a new thing!
  • Three – We must look around and see what God is doing.
  • Four – We are God's people.
  • Five – We are to proclaim his praise.
Jul 17, 2018

When God changes your plans? ›

When he changes your plans, it's because he knows what you do not know and it's good for you. God loves you. He doesn't have ulterior motives or a hidden agenda. He is making us more and more like Jesus, his perfect Son.

What does it mean that God forgives for his own sake? ›

As I read around it, Isaiah 43:25 caught my eye, "I, even I, am he who blots out your transgressions, for my own sake, and remembers your sins no more." This really sounds like God forgives us not just so we don't receive the consequences of our own choices, to save us from our own sin.

Is 43/25 kjv? ›

I, even I, am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins.

What is the meaning of Isaiah 43 24? ›

God said, "You have wearied me with your sins" (Isaiah 43:24). They had not only rejected the sacrificial system but had given themselves to immorality. In their newfound freedom, having cast off the God who made them a people in the first place, they entered into versions of sin previously thought unimaginable.

Where in the Bible does it say "I will remember your sins no more"? ›

Hebrews 8:12 in Other Translations

12 For I will be merciful toward their iniquities, and I will remember their sins no more." 12 And I will forgive their wickedness, and I will never again remember their sins.” 12 They'll get to know me by being kindly forgiven, with the slate of their sins forever wiped clean.

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