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Read the Bible

Complete Jewish Bible

Isaiah 42:18

Listen, you deaf! Look, you blind! — so that you will see!

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Blindness;   Isaiah;   Jesus, the Christ;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Isaiah;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Blindness;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Blind;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Deafness;   Isaiah;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Election;   Micah, Book of;   Righteousness;   Servant of the Lord;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Reed;   Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types - Deaf;   Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary - Blindness;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Blindness;   Deaf;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
“Listen, you deaf!Look, you blind, so that you may see.
Hebrew Names Version
Hear, you deaf; and look, you blind, that you may see.
King James Version
Hear, ye deaf; and look, ye blind, that ye may see.
English Standard Version
Hear, you deaf, and look, you blind, that you may see!
New American Standard Bible
Hear, you who are deaf! And look, you who are blind, so that you may see.
New Century Version
"You who are deaf, hear me. You who are blind, look and see.
Amplified Bible
Hear, you deaf! And look, you blind, that you may see.
World English Bible
Hear, you deaf; and look, you blind, that you may see.
Geneva Bible (1587)
Heare, ye deafe: and ye blinde, regarde, that ye may see.
Legacy Standard Bible
Hear, you deaf!And look, you blind, that you may see.
Berean Standard Bible
"Listen, you deaf, and look, you blind, that you may see.
Contemporary English Version
You people are deaf and blind, but the Lord commands you to listen and to see.
Darby Translation
—Hear, ye deaf; and look, ye blind, that ye may see.
Easy-to-Read Version
"Deaf people, listen to me! Blind people, look and see!
George Lamsa Translation
Hear, O you deaf! And understand and see, O you blind!
Good News Translation
The Lord says, "Listen, you deaf people! Look closely, you that are blind!
Lexham English Bible
Deaf people, listen! And blind people, look to see!
Literal Translation
O deaf ones, hear! And O blind ones, look to see!
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
Heare, o ye deaf men, and sharpen youre sightes to se (o ye blinde.)
American Standard Version
Hear, ye deaf; and look, ye blind, that ye may see.
Bible in Basic English
Give ear, you whose ears are shut; and let your eyes be open, you blind, so that you may see.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
Hear, ye deaf, and look, ye blind, that ye may see.
King James Version (1611)
Heare ye deafe, and looke ye blinde that ye may see.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
Heare O ye deafe men, and sharpen your eyes to see O ye blinde.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
Hear, ye deaf, and look up, ye blind, to see.
English Revised Version
Hear, ye deaf; and look, ye blind, that ye may see.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Ye deef men, here; and ye blynde men, biholde to se.
Update Bible Version
Hear, you deaf; and look, you blind, that you may see.
Webster's Bible Translation
Hear, ye deaf; and look, ye blind, that ye may see.
New English Translation
"Listen, you deaf ones! Take notice, you blind ones!
New King James Version
"Hear, you deaf; And look, you blind, that you may see.
New Living Translation
"Listen, you who are deaf! Look and see, you blind!
New Life Bible
Listen, you who do not hear! And look, you blind, that you may see.
New Revised Standard
Listen, you that are deaf; and you that are blind, look up and see!
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
Ye deaf hear! And ye blind look around that ye may see, Who is blind if not my Servant? Or deaf, like, my messenger whom I send?
Douay-Rheims Bible
Hear, ye deaf, and, ye blind, behold that you may see.
Revised Standard Version
Hear, you deaf; and look, you blind, that you may see!
Young's Literal Translation
Ye deaf, hear; and ye blind, look to see.
THE MESSAGE
Pay attention! Are you deaf? Open your eyes! Are you blind? You're my servant, and you're not looking! You're my messenger, and you're not listening! The very people I depended upon, servants of God , blind as a bat—willfully blind! You've seen a lot, but looked at nothing. You've heard everything, but listened to nothing. God intended, out of the goodness of his heart, to be lavish in his revelation. But this is a people battered and cowed, shut up in attics and closets, Victims licking their wounds, feeling ignored, abandoned. But is anyone out there listening? Is anyone paying attention to what's coming? Who do you think turned Jacob over to the thugs, let loose the robbers on Israel? Wasn't it God himself, this God against whom we've sinned— not doing what he commanded, not listening to what he said? Isn't it God's anger that's behind all this, God's punishing power? Their whole world collapsed but they still didn't get it; their life is in ruins but they don't take it to heart.
New American Standard Bible (1995)
Hear, you deaf! And look, you blind, that you may see.

Contextual Overview

18 Listen, you deaf! Look, you blind! — so that you will see! 19 Who is as blind as my servant, or as deaf as the messenger I send? Who is as blind as the one I rewarded, as blind as the servant of Adonai ?" 20 You see much but don't pay attention; you open your ears, but you don't listen. 21 Adonai was pleased, for his righteousness' sake, to make the Torah great and glorious. 22 But this is a people pillaged and plundered, all trapped in holes and sequestered in prisons. They are there to be plundered, with no one to rescue them; there to be pillaged, and no one says, "Return them!" 23 Which of you will listen to this? Who will hear and give heed in the times to come? 24 Who gave Ya‘akov to be pillaged, Isra'el to the plunderers? Didn't Adonai , against whom we have sinned, in whose ways they refused to walk, he whose Torah they did not obey? 25 This is why he poured on him his blazing anger as well as the fury of battle — it wrapped him in flames, yet he learned nothing; it burned him, yet he did not take it to heart.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

ye deaf: Isaiah 29:18, Isaiah 43:8, Exodus 4:11, Proverbs 20:12, Mark 7:34-37, Luke 7:22, Revelation 3:17, Revelation 3:18

Reciprocal: Psalms 146:8 - openeth Isaiah 44:9 - their own Isaiah 45:20 - they Ezekiel 37:4 - O ye Matthew 13:13 - General Matthew 20:30 - two Mark 3:5 - hardness Mark 8:18 - see John 8:27 - General John 9:39 - might be 2 Corinthians 3:14 - their Revelation 9:20 - and idols

Cross-References

Genesis 20:11
Avraham replied, "It was because I thought, ‘There could not possibly be any fear of God in this place, so they will kill me in order to get my wife.'
Leviticus 25:43
Do not treat him harshly, but fear your God.
Nehemiah 5:9
I also said, "What you are doing is not good! You should be living in fear of our God, so that our pagan enemies won't have grounds for deriding us.
Nehemiah 5:15
The earlier governors, before me, had burdened the people, taxing them more than one-and-a-half pounds of silver shekels for food and wine; and even their servants lorded it over the people. But I didn't, because I feared God.
Luke 18:2
"In a certain town, there was a judge who neither feared God nor respected other people.
Luke 18:4
For a long time he refused; but after awhile, he said to himself, ‘I don't fear God, and I don't respect other people;

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Hear, ye deaf; and look, ye blind, that ye may see. Jarchi and Kimchi think these words are spoken to Israel, who, as Aben Ezra says, were deaf and blind in heart; but they are rather an exhortation to the Gentiles that remained impenitent and unbelieving, and who were deaf to the voice of the Gospel, and blind as to the knowledge of it; and the purport of the exhortation is, that they would make use of their external hearing and sight, which they had, that they might attain to a spiritual hearing and understanding of divine things; "for faith comes by hearing, and hearing the word of God", Romans 10:17 to hear the Gospel preached, and to look into the Scriptures, and read the word of God, are the means of attaining light and knowledge in spiritual things; and these are within the compass of natural men, who are internally deaf and blind.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Hear, ye deaf - This is evidently an address to the Jews, and probably to the Jews of the time of the prophet. He had been predicting the coming of the Messiah, and the influence of his religion on the Gentile world. He had said that God would go forth to destroy the idolatry of the pagan nations, and to convince them of the folly of the worship of images, and to confound them for putting their trust in them. He seems here to have recollected that this was the easily-besetting sin of his own countrymen, and perhaps especially of the times when he penned this portion of the prophecy - under the reign of Manasseh; that that generation was stupid, blind, deaf to the calls of God, and sunk in the deepest debasement of idolatry. In view of this, and of the great truths which he had uttered, he calls on them to hear, to be alarmed, to return to God, and assures them that for these sins they exposed themselves to, and must experience, his sore displeasure. The statement of these truths, and the denouncing of these judgments, occupy the remainder of this chapter. A similar instance occurs in Isaiah 2:0, where the prophet, having foretold the coming of the Messiah, and the fact that his religion would be extended among the Gentiles, turns and reproves the Jews for their idolatry and crimes (see the notes at that chapter). The Jewish people are often described as ‘deaf’ to the voice of God, and ‘blind’ to their duty and their interests (see Isaiah 29:18; Isaiah 42:8).

And look ... that ye may see - This phrase denotes an attentive, careful, and anxious search, in order that there may be a clear view of the object. The prophet calls them to an attentive contemplation of the object, that they might have a clear and distinct view of it. They had hitherto looked at the subject of religion in a careless, inattentive, and thoughtless manner.


 
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