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Isaiah 15

The Oracle Against Moab and the Night of Devastating Lament

Isaiah 15 laments the sudden devastation of Moab, showing that the Lord’s judgment on the nations brings public grief, refugee flight, ruined land, and cries that reach from city centers to the borders.

Chapter Summary

Isaiah 15 laments the sudden devastation of Moab, showing that the Lord’s judgment on the nations brings public grief, refugee flight, ruined land, and cries that reach from city centers to the borders.

Overview

The Lord’s judgment against Moab is sudden, public, comprehensive, and grievous. It exposes the fragility of cities, shrines, armies, resources, and borders, while also showing that prophetic speech can announce judgment with compassion.

Context
Author

Isaiah son of Amoz

Audience

Judah and Jerusalem, with Moab directly addressed in the oracle against the nations

Setting

Isaiah 15 continues the oracles against the nations in Isaiah 13–23. After Babylon, Assyria, and Philistia, the prophetic focus turns to Moab. The chapter is dominated by lament rather than taunt. Moab’s cities are ruined, its people weep publicly, fugitives flee, and the land is filled with crying.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from the overnight ruin of Moabite cities, to public mourning at religious and civic centers, to the prophet’s own cry over Moab, to fugitives fleeing southward, to dried-up waters and lost abundance, and finally to blood-filled waters and further calamity by lions.

Covenant Significance

Isaiah 15 shows that the Lord’s rule and judgment extend beyond Israel and Judah to neighboring nations like Moab. Although Moab is not the covenant people in the same way as Israel, Moab is still accountable under the Lord’s sovereign rule. The chapter also models prophetic compassion toward judged nations.

Gospel Clarity

Isaiah 15 shows the helplessness of a nation under judgment. Temples, high places, armies, cities, wealth, water, and land cannot save. The chapter’s lament reveals the need for a refuge stronger than geography, religion, or possessions.

Focus Points

  • Sudden Judgment
  • Public Lament
  • Collapse of Human Strength
  • Prophetic Compassion
  • Refugee Flight
  • Environmental Desolation
  • Loss of Wealth and Possessions
  • Judgment Spreading Through the Land
  • Further Calamity
  • Judgment on the Nations
  • Sudden Calamity
  • False Worship Exposed
  • Lament
  • Human Frailty
  • Refugee Suffering
  • Creation and Resource Loss
  • Continuing Judgment

Passages

Chapter opening: Isaiah 15:1-9

Book Arc