Text: Isaiah 40:28
OT Text Referred to: Genesis 1:1
Subject: the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth
Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Echo
Connection Method(s): Redemptive-Historical Progression + Longitudinal Theme
Anchor Text: Gen 1:1 — In the Beginning
Significance: Isaiah 40:28 caps the great comfort-chapter with an echo of Genesis 1:1's creatorhood: "Do you not know? Have you not heard? The LORD is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He will not grow tired or weary; His understanding is beyond searching out." The title "Creator of the ends of the earth" gathers up Genesis 1:1's claim that God made the totality of creation, and the chapter has already pressed that claim against idols (Isa 40:18-26). Here, though, the pastoral turn is decisive: because the One who made the heavens and the earth never grows weary, the exiles who "wait on the LORD" will "renew their strength" (Isa 40:31). The inexhaustible energy of the Genesis 1:1 Creator becomes the ground of His people's endurance. This is redemptive-historical progression and longitudinal development, not typology: the premise of Genesis 1:1 is applied as comfort to a fainting people. The telos is hope and delight in God's sheer sufficiency: the Maker of the cosmos is not a distant first cause but an everlasting strength given to the weak, whose understanding is beyond searching out. Read canonically, the tireless Creator of Isaiah 40:28 is the God whose creating Word is the Son who upholds all things by His powerful word (Heb 1:3) — so that beholding the everlasting Creator here is to find in Christ an unwearied strength worthy of all our waiting and all our joy.