Isaiah 32 sketches a society renewed by a righteous King and the poured-out Spirit. Justice moves in, deserts bloom, and peace grows as the fruit of righteousness, giving quietness and confidence even when storms come.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Welcome to the complete exposition of God’s Word. This free resource provides a detailed, chapter-by-chapter study of the entire Bible (1,189 chapters) alongside overview articles for all 66 books. Unlike topical studies, these commentaries walk through the text verse-by-verse, ensuring that we hear the whole counsel of God in context.
Our Interpretive approach allows us to maintain consistency across the entire Bible, these studies utilize a Literal, Grammatical-Historical method of interpretation. This framework ensures:
Contextual Integrity: We respect the original audience and history of each passage.
Israel & The Church: We distinguish between God’s program for National Israel and His distinct calling for the Body of Christ.
Christ-Centeredness: While respecting the timeline, we see Jesus Christ as the center of all history and the only Savior for all ages.
For a detailed explanation of our interpretive method, read Our Theological Framework.
How to Use This Library: The chapter studies below are organized by the traditional divisions of Scripture. Click on a section (like “The Pentateuch” or “The Gospels”) to reveal the individual books and chapter links. Traditional keyword searching is not enabled in this category. This library is designed for browsing. Please locate your study using the book and chapter designations below:
Isaiah 32 sketches a society renewed by a righteous King and the poured-out Spirit. Justice moves in, deserts bloom, and peace grows as the fruit of righteousness, giving quietness and confidence even when storms come.
Isaiah 31 rebukes Judah’s reliance on Egypt and calls them back to the Holy One. The Lord promises lion-strong, bird-gentle protection and a nonhuman victory over Assyria for a people who return and cast away their idols.
Isaiah 30 rebukes Judah’s rush to Egypt and offers a better way: repentance and rest, quietness and trust. God promises visible guidance, idol-renouncing renewal, healing light, and victory that turns panic into praise.
Isaiah 29 confronts a worshiping city that has lost its heart. God promises to humble pride, open deaf ears and blind eyes, cleanse public life, and restore Jacob to awe so that the humble rejoice in the Holy One of Israel.
Isaiah 28 exposes the lie of a “covenant with death” and offers a better foundation: God’s tested Cornerstone in Zion. The chapter calls readers to reject false refuges, receive God’s word as rest, and live measured by justice and righteousness.
Isaiah 27 pairs a slain sea-monster with a kept vineyard to show God’s cosmic victory and covenant care. Through discipline that destroys idols and a trumpet that gathers the scattered, the Lord brings his people to worship on Zion and spreads fruit to the world.
Isaiah 26 teaches a song for steady hearts: salvation as city walls, trust in the Rock eternal, and the promise that dust-dwellers will rise. It calls the church to humble dependence now and patient hope until the Lord’s zeal and justice are seen by all.
Isaiah 25 sings praise to the God who planned wonderful things and brings them to pass. On Zion he spreads a feast for all peoples, swallows death, wipes tears, and humbles pride, inviting the world to trust his salvation and taste his future joy.
Isaiah 24 widens the lens from local oracles to a world under judgment for breaking God’s covenant. Through ruin and song, the chapter ends with the Lord reigning in Zion, anchoring hope beyond the earth’s shaking.
Isaiah 23 humbles a proud port and redirects its gains toward God’s people. The oracle teaches that seas and markets answer to the Lord, who breaks pride and consecrates profit for those who live before him.
Isaiah 22 exposes a city feasting when it should repent and a steward seeking status over service. It directs us to trust the Lord who appoints faithful stewards and fulfills the promise to David in Christ, who opens and none can shut.
Isaiah 21 is a night watch: a storm fells Babylon, a sentry answers anxious cries, and caravans are told to serve fugitives while God’s clock runs. The chapter teaches watchful faith that rejects idols, loves neighbors, and waits for the morning the Lord has promised.
Assyria’s capture of Ashdod frames Isaiah’s three-year sign: stripped and barefoot, he embodies the fate awaiting Egypt and Cush. Judah’s temptation to seek southern help is exposed as a path to shame, and the chapter counsels a better trust in the Lord who defends Zion in his time and way.
The Lord rides a cloud into Egypt, idols tremble, and the Nile economy collapses. Then mercy rises: an altar in Egypt, vows kept, healing given, and a highway joining Egypt, Assyria, and Israel under a triune blessing. Isaiah 19 shows how God strikes to heal and gathers former enemies into worship.
Isaiah 33 Chapter Study
Published by Brother Woody BrohmIsaiah 33 teaches believers to pray at daybreak and to see beyond siege: the Lord rises, Zion is filled with justice, and eyes behold the King in his beauty. The chapter ends where true safety begins—pardon given and a people dwelling in peace under their saving Judge, Lawgiver, and King.