Verse explainer

What does Isaiah 40:28 really mean?

God doesn't run out of strength or attention — this verse answers the fear that your situation has slipped past him unnoticed.

KJV

Hast thou not known? hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the LORD, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? there is no searching of his understanding.

BSB

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.

Isaiah 40 is addressed to exiles who felt abandoned — worn down and invisible to God. Verse 27 names the fear directly: "My way is hid from the LORD, and my judgment is passed over from my God." Verse 28 answers it with two double questions — "hast thou not known? hast thou not heard?" — as if to say: this is not new information, you already have it. The answer given is threefold: God is everlasting (not bound by time), Creator of the ends of the earth (not limited in reach), and never faint or weary (not depleted by the demands placed on him). The closing phrase — "there is no searching of his understanding" — is not a warning about God being unknowable in a cold, distant sense. It is reassurance: his wisdom and attention are so inexhaustible that no case, no person, no grief is too complex or too small for him to miss. The verse works as a pastoral corrective to exhausted, despairing people who have concluded that God has either forgotten them or run out of capacity to help.

"There is no searching of his understanding" means God is too mysterious to be known or trusted. The phrase sometimes gets read as a statement of divine inscrutability — a kind of theological shrug: God is unknowable, so don't expect answers. But in context the logic runs the opposite direction. The verse is answering people who fear God has overlooked their suffering (v. 27: "my way is hid from the LORD"). The unsearchable understanding is the reassurance, not the problem. It means God's wisdom and attention are so vast they cannot be exhausted or outrun — not that he is remote and indifferent. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown put it plainly: because his understanding cannot be searched out, your cause cannot escape his notice. The inexhaustibility cuts against despair, not toward it. Read straight, the verse is one of the warmest comfort texts in the Hebrew prophets — not a cold statement of divine mystery, but the answer to a people who were afraid they had been forgotten.
Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB reads the opening questions as an appeal to what the hearers already know from Scripture and received tradition — they have no excuse for despair. The clause 'no searching of his understanding' directly rebuts the complaint of v. 27: God's cause cannot escape his notice. He is never worn down by the endless wants of his people pressing upon him; his attention is infinite and his wisdom never runs dry.

John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill emphasizes that the God described here gives power to the faint precisely because he himself never faints — the inexhaustible source can supply the exhausted creature. The unsearchable understanding is not a barrier between God and his people but the very ground of their confidence: a wisdom too deep to be traced cannot be outpaced, outwitted, or overwhelmed by the complexity of any human situation.

יָגַע yaga'

"To be weary, to toil to exhaustion." The same verb appears in v. 30, where even young men grow weary and fall. Isaiah sets up a deliberate contrast: every human category — the young, the strong, the mighty — eventually reaches the limit of yaga'. God, the verse insists, never does. The word is physical and visceral, making the point concrete: the Creator of the cosmos is not wearing out under the weight of it.