Text Size
Isaiah 35

The Way of Holiness and the Return of the Redeemed

The Lord will come to save His fearful people, transform the wilderness, heal the broken, open the Way of Holiness, and bring His ransomed home to Zion with everlasting joy.

Chapter Summary

The Lord will come to save His fearful people, transform the wilderness, heal the broken, open the Way of Holiness, and bring His ransomed home to Zion with everlasting joy.

Overview

The chapter argues that the Lord’s saving arrival reverses desolation in creation, weakness in His people, bodily brokenness, wilderness barrenness, dangerous exile, and sorrow, bringing the redeemed safely home to Zion in holiness and joy.

Context
Author

Isaiah son of Amoz

Audience

Judah and Jerusalem, especially those weakened by fear, judgment, exile-like threat, and the need for hope in the Lord’s saving return.

Setting

Isaiah 35 stands at the close of Isaiah 28-35, following oracles of warning, false refuge, judgment, and desolation. It functions as a vision of restoration beyond the crisis, anticipating the Lord’s saving intervention and the return of His redeemed people.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

Isaiah 35 moves from wilderness transformation and creation’s rejoicing, to the strengthening of fearful and weak people, to the coming of God with vengeance and salvation, to the healing of the blind, deaf, lame, and mute, to waters breaking forth in the desert, and finally to the Way of Holiness where the redeemed return to Zion with everlasting joy.

Covenant Significance

Isaiah 35 presents covenant restoration after judgment: the Lord comes to save, renews the land, heals His people, provides a holy way, and brings His ransomed back to Zion with joy.

Gospel Clarity

The gospel clarity in Isaiah 35 is that God Himself comes to save the weak, fearful, broken, barren, and exiled. Salvation is not human recovery by self-strength but divine rescue, healing, ransom, holiness, and homecoming. In Christ, the saving God comes near, opens blind eyes, unstops deaf ears, makes the lame walk, gives living water, ransoms His people, and brings them on the holy way toward everlasting joy.

Focus Points

  • Creation Renewal
  • The Glory of the Lord
  • Strength for the Fearful
  • Divine Vengeance and Salvation
  • Healing Restoration
  • Living Waters
  • Holiness
  • Ransom and Redemption
  • Everlasting Joy
  • The Lord restores creation, bodies, land, safety, worship, and joy.
  • The renewed creation displays the glory and majesty of the Lord.
  • God Himself comes to save His people.
  • God’s vengeance and recompense are part of His saving intervention against evil.
  • The restoration of blind, deaf, lame, and mute becomes a major sign of messianic salvation.
  • The transformation of wilderness into blossoming life and living waters anticipates new-creation renewal.
  • The redeemed path is called the Way of Holiness, showing that salvation creates a holy people and holy journey.
  • The people are called ransomed and redeemed, emphasizing deliverance by the Lord’s action and ownership.
  • The chapter strengthens the weak and fearful by directing them toward God’s certain future.
  • Everlasting joy and the flight of sorrow point toward final restoration in God’s presence.

Passages

Chapter opening: Isaiah 35:1-10

Book Arc