Context: Isaiah 64:4 belongs to a communal lament (Isaiah 63:7-64:12) in which the prophet pleads for God to intervene on behalf of His people. After recalling God's mighty acts in the Exodus (63:11-14) and appealing to His fatherly compassion (63:15-16), Isaiah declares: "From of old no one has heard or perceived by the ear, no eye has seen a God besides you, who acts for those who wait for him." The verse stands as a testimony to the incomprehensibility of God's saving activity: it surpasses every faculty of human perception — hearing, sight, imagination. No one has seen or heard such a God. The implied contrast is with the idols of the nations, which are products of human imagination and craftsmanship. The true God acts in ways that transcend all human capacity to anticipate or discover. This verse becomes foundational for Paul's theology of revelation: what human wisdom could never discover, God has disclosed through His Spirit.
Hebrew Key Terms:
OT-to-OT Development: Isaiah 64:4 develops the wisdom-hiddenness motif established in Job 28: where Job declared wisdom inaccessible to human search ("hidden from the eyes of all living," Job 28:21), Isaiah extends this to God's saving acts themselves — they exceed all sensory experience. The verse also connects to Deuteronomy 4:32-35, where Moses asks whether any nation has heard or seen what Israel experienced at Sinai. Isaiah takes this further: God's future saving acts will surpass even the Exodus and Sinai theophanies. The prophetic anticipation builds toward an act so unprecedented that no prior experience can prepare for it.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Paul paraphrases Isaiah 64:4 in 1 Corinthians 2:9 — "What no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man imagined, what God has prepared for those who love Him" — and immediately adds: "these things God has revealed to us through the Spirit" (v. 10). The "things no eye has seen" are the crucified and risen Christ as God's wisdom and power. What Isaiah confessed as beyond human perception, Paul proclaims as now disclosed in the gospel. The cross is the unprecedented act Isaiah anticipated: no human imagination could have conceived that the Creator would save through being crucified as a criminal.
The escalation from Isaiah to Paul is from anticipation to revelation. Isaiah could only confess that God's saving acts exceed human comprehension; Paul reveals what those acts are — the mystery of Christ crucified, "decreed before the ages for our glory" (1 Corinthians 2:7). The Spirit who now reveals these things is the same Spirit "of the LORD" whose counsel no one has directed (Isaiah 40:13) — but through Christ, believers receive this very Spirit and gain access to what was formerly incomprehensible.
The already/not-yet framework applies: what God "has prepared" includes both the redemption already accomplished (cross and resurrection) and the glory yet to be revealed (the consummation). Believers already know the mystery of the cross through the Spirit; they do not yet fully experience all that God has prepared for those who love Him.
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment — Isaiah's declaration that God's saving acts surpass all human perception is cited by Paul (1 Corinthians 2:9) as fulfilled in the cross, which no eye foresaw, no ear heard, and no heart imagined — yet God has now revealed through His Spirit. Also Contrast — the verse establishes the infinite gap between human perceptive capacity and divine saving action, which Paul exploits to contrast the limitations of worldly wisdom with the Spirit-revealed wisdom of the cross.
Trajectory Table: 172 - Wisdom and Foolishness of the Cross