Context: Isaiah 43:16-21 sits in the heart of Deutero-Isaiah's "Book of Consolation" (chs. 40-55), a section addressed to a people already envisaged in Babylonian exile and awaiting YHWH's promised return. The oracle opens with a formulaic participial self-identification of YHWH that deliberately rehearses Exodus 14 vocabulary—"who makes a way [דֶּרֶךְ] in the sea, a path in the mighty waters, who brings out chariot and horse, army and warrior; they lie down, they cannot rise, they are extinguished, quenched like a wick" (vv. 16-17). Every major lexeme of the original Red Sea narrative is summoned: yam (sea), the drowned Egyptian military, the irreversible finality of their destruction. But at verse 18 the prophet pivots with shocking force: "Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old." The God who just reminded His people of the Exodus now tells them not to remember it—because He is about to do "a new thing" (חָדָשׁ, v. 19) that will eclipse even the paradigmatic deliverance. The "way in the sea" will become a "way in the wilderness," and the sea of salvation-through-judgment will give way to "rivers in the desert." The rhetorical function is not to demean the first Exodus but to make it prospective: it is no longer merely a memory but a template for something greater.
Hebrew Key Terms:
OT-to-OT Development: This oracle is itself an act of OT-to-OT development: Isaiah self-consciously mines Exodus 14 (the staff-raising, the sea dividing, the drowning of Pharaoh's "chariots and horses," Ex 14:23-28) and Exodus 15:4 ("Pharaoh's chariots and his host he cast into the sea") only to overwrite it with a greater deliverance. Isaiah 51:9-11 extends the trajectory by fusing the Red Sea with primordial creation combat: "Was it not you who cut Rahab in pieces, who pierced the dragon? Was it not you who dried up the sea, the waters of the great deep [תְּהוֹם], who made the depths of the sea a way [דֶּרֶךְ] for the redeemed to pass over?" The Red Sea is thus triangulated with both creation (Chaoskampf) and eschaton (return of the ransomed). Isaiah 63:11-14 closes the retrospective arc by meditating on Moses and the Holy Spirit who "led them through the depths" — explicitly naming the Spirit as the agent of Exodus deliverance, a framing picked up by Paul's baptism-cloud-sea complex (1 Cor 10:1-4). Jeremiah 16:14-15 and 23:7-8 continue the same hermeneutical move: "they shall no longer say, 'As the LORD lives who brought up the people of Israel out of the land of Egypt,' but 'As the LORD lives who brought up the people of Israel out of the north country.'" The first Exodus becomes the grammar by which Israel expects — and eventually recognizes — God's next, greater rescue.
Connections:
Christological Connection: The meaning of Isaiah 43:16-21 in its own canonical location is a deliberate prophetic relativizing of Israel's founding deliverance. The Red Sea was never the final act of salvation; it was a pattern awaiting a fuller instance. By citing Exodus 14 and then commanding Israel not to remember it, Isaiah is not denying its historicity but announcing that its meaning is not exhausted by what happened at the Reed Sea — the event anticipates a "new thing" that YHWH alone can do (vv. 19-20), for which the first Exodus functions as template and guarantee. This is the decisive hermeneutical move that makes the entire Red Sea typology forward-looking rather than merely retrospective: when the NT writers identify Christ's death as the new Exodus, they are not reading Christology back into an unwilling text — they are answering the prophetic summons Isaiah himself issued.
The significance of this oracle finds its telos in Jesus of Nazareth. Luke deliberately stages the Transfiguration as a fulfillment event: Moses and Elijah discuss Jesus' ἔξοδος (Luke 9:31), the "new thing" Isaiah promised. Paul's treatment in 1 Corinthians 10 is even more explicit — the Red Sea crossing was typos for Christian baptism, and the "spiritual Rock that followed them" was Christ (1 Cor 10:4). The escalation is total: Isaiah promised "a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert" (v. 19); Jesus announces, "If anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink" and streams of living water flow from the believer (John 7:37-39). Where Isaiah's new exodus returned the nation to a geographical land, Christ's new exodus transfers the redeemed "from the domain of darkness" into "the kingdom of his beloved Son" (Colossians 1:13-14).
The already/not-yet structure is built into the oracle. The "new thing" springs forth already (v. 19 — "now it springs forth") in Christ's inaugurated kingdom; the consummation awaits the day when the sea of judgment is finally abolished (Rev 21:1, "the sea was no more") and the Song of Moses is swallowed up in the Song of the Lamb (Rev 15:3). Paul's explicit echo of Isaiah 43:18-19 in 2 Corinthians 5:17 — "the old has passed away; behold, the new has come" — makes every believer a living witness that Isaiah's promised "new thing" has begun.
Connection Method(s):
Anti-default verification: Is typology the right method, or is promise-fulfillment alone sufficient? Both apply — Isaiah frames this as promise ("I am doing a new thing"), and the NT treats the Red Sea itself as typos (1 Cor 10:6, 11). Contrast is not the appropriate category (Isaiah does not denigrate the first Exodus as inadequate so much as prospectively relativize it), nor is analogy (the connection is genetic-historical, not merely illustrative).
Trajectory Table: 039 - Crossing the Red Sea (Baptism into Christ)