Isaiah, speaking within the prophetic book’s larger canonical witness.
Zion’s Righteousness Shines and the Lord Gives Her a New Name
Isaiah 62 declares the Lord’s unceasing commitment to Zion’s vindication, new identity, covenant delight, intercessory watchfulness, harvest security, prepared highway, and public recognition as the Holy People and Redeemed of the Lord.
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The Lord will not rest until Zion’s righteousness and salvation shine before the nations, her shame is replaced with a new name, her watchmen intercede, her people are redeemed, and her city is no longer deserted.
Isaiah 62 argues that the Lord is personally committed to Zion’s full public restoration. He will not leave her righteousness hidden, her salvation dim, her shame unnamed, her watchmen silent, her harvest stolen, her path blocked, or her people unidentified. He gives a new name, establishes intercession, swears by His own power, announces salvation, and names His people holy and redeemed.
Zion/Jerusalem personified as the restored covenant city, her watchmen and intercessors, the scattered people of God, and the nations who will see the Lord’s vindication.
Isaiah 62 follows Isaiah 61’s Spirit-anointed proclamation of good news, comfort, rebuilt ruins, priestly identity, everlasting covenant, and righteousness springing up before all nations. Isaiah 62 intensifies the public vindication of Zion: righteousness shines, salvation blazes, nations see, kings behold, and the Lord gives a new name.
Isaiah 62 declares the Lord’s unceasing commitment to Zion’s vindication, new identity, covenant delight, intercessory watchfulness, harvest security, prepared highway, and public recognition as the Holy People and Redeemed of the Lord.
Isaiah, speaking within the prophetic book’s larger canonical witness.
Zion/Jerusalem personified as the restored covenant city, her watchmen and intercessors, the scattered people of God, and the nations who will see the Lord’s vindication.
Isaiah 62 follows Isaiah 61’s Spirit-anointed proclamation of good news, comfort, rebuilt ruins, priestly identity, everlasting covenant, and righteousness springing up before all nations. Isaiah 62 intensifies the public vindication of Zion: righteousness shines, salvation blazes, nations see, kings behold, and the Lord gives a new name.
- The people have known shame, forsakenness, desolation, foreign oppression, stolen harvests, ruined identity, and unanswered longing for restoration. The chapter answers those wounds with divine resolve, new naming, covenant delight, watchman prayer, sworn protection, and public salvation.
The chapter uses royal crown imagery, naming practices, marriage and land imagery, city watchmen, persistent intercession, divine oath, grain and wine harvests, sanctuary courts, highway preparation, banner-signaling for peoples, Daughter Zion language, reward/recompense formula, redemption identity, and city-renaming.
From the speaker’s refusal to be silent until Zion shines, to nations and kings seeing her glory, to the Lord giving a new name, to Zion becoming a crown in the Lord’s hand, to forsakenness and desolation being replaced by delight and marriage, to watchmen giving the Lord no rest, to the Lord swearing harvest security, to the command to prepare the highway and announce the Savior’s coming, to the restored people receiving names of holiness, redemption, sought-after status, and no-longer-deserted identity.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Isaiah 62 forms a people who refuse despairing silence, receive a Lord-given name, pray like watchmen, prepare the way for return, announce the Savior’s coming, and live as holy redeemed people whose identity is no longer deserted.
Zion’s righteousness and salvation will shine publicly before nations and kings.
Zion becomes a crown of splendor and royal diadem in the Lord’s hand.
Deserted and Desolate are replaced by the names of delight, marriage, and divine rejoicing.
Watchmen continually call on the Lord until Jerusalem is established as the praise of the earth.
The Lord swears that enemies will no longer consume the people’s grain and wine.
The highway is prepared, obstacles removed, banner raised, and salvation announced to Daughter Zion.
The people are named holy and redeemed
The city is named sought after and no longer deserted.
- 62:1–2:
- 62:4–5:
- 62:6–7:
- 62:8–9:
- 62:10–11:
Theological Argument
Isaiah 62 argues that the Lord is personally committed to Zion’s full public restoration. He will not leave her righteousness hidden, her salvation dim, her shame unnamed, her watchmen silent, her harvest stolen, her path blocked, or her people unidentified. He gives a new name, establishes intercession, swears by His own power, announces salvation, and names His people holy and redeemed.
The chapter moves from divine resolve, to public radiance, to royal honor, to covenant delight, to persistent intercession, to sworn protection, to prepared way, to renewed identity.
- 1.Zion’s restoration is a matter of divine resolve.
- 2.Zion’s righteousness and glory will be publicly visible.
- 3.The LORD gives Zion a new identity.
- 4.Zion’s restored honor is secure in the LORD’s possession.
- 5.The LORD reverses shame with covenant delight.
- 6.The restored relationship is pictured as divine rejoicing.
- 7.The LORD’s promise includes appointed prayer.
- 8.Persistent intercession aligns with God’s own purpose.
- 9.The LORD protects the fruit of his people’s labor.
- 10.Restoration requires prepared access and removed obstacles.
- 11.The Savior’s coming is proclaimed to the ends of the earth.
- 12.The final word is redeemed identity.
Theological Focus
- Divine resolve
- Righteousness shining
- Salvation blazing
- New name
- Royal honor
- Covenant delight
- Marriage imagery
- Watchman intercession
- Sworn protection
- Prepared way
- Coming Savior
- Redeemed identity
- Divine Zeal
- Righteousness
- Salvation
- New Identity
- Covenant Delight
- Intercession
- Divine Oath
- Savior
- Redemption
- Holiness
- Mission to the Peoples
Theological Themes
The speaker will not be silent until Zion’s restoration is publicly manifest.
Zion’s righteousness will shine like the dawn before the nations.
Zion’s salvation will appear like a blazing torch.
The Lord gives Zion a new name that replaces her shame identity.
Zion becomes a crown of splendor and royal diadem in the Lord’s hand.
The Lord delights in Zion and rejoices over her like a bridegroom over His bride.
Desolate land is pictured as married, restored to covenant fruitfulness and belonging.
The Lord appoints watchmen who persist in prayer until Jerusalem is established.
The Lord swears by His right hand and mighty arm to secure His people’s harvest.
The highway is prepared, stones removed, and a banner raised for the peoples.
Daughter Zion is told that her Savior comes with reward and recompense.
The people are called holy and redeemed; the city is sought after and no longer deserted.
Covenant Significance
Isaiah 62 portrays covenant restoration as a complete reversal of forsakenness. The Lord gives Zion a new name, delights in her, rejoices over her, appoints watchmen, swears protection, restores harvest enjoyment in His courts, prepares the way for salvation, and names His people holy and redeemed.
- Covenant vindication - Zion’s righteousness and salvation will shine publicly before nations and kings.
- Covenant naming - The Lord gives Zion a new name from His own mouth.
- Covenant possession - Zion is a crown and diadem in the Lord’s hand.
- Covenant delight - The Lord delights in Zion and rejoices over her.
- Covenant marriage - The land is no longer desolate but married.
- Covenant intercession - Watchmen are appointed to call on the Lord continually.
- Covenant oath - The Lord swears by His own right hand and mighty arm.
- Covenant harvest - Those who harvest will eat and praise the Lord in His sanctuary courts.
- Covenant highway - The way is prepared for the people and a banner raised for the peoples.
- Covenant redemption - The people are called the Redeemed of the Lord.
- Covenant holiness - The people are called the Holy People.
- Covenant reversal - The city is called Sought After and No Longer Deserted.
Canonical Connections
The Lord will not rest until Zion’s righteousness and salvation shine before the nations, her shame is replaced with a new name, her watchmen intercede, her people are redeemed, and her city is no longer deserted.
Cross References
But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, that you may proclaim the excellence of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.
Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old things have passed away. Behold, all things have become new.
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the assembly, and gave himself up for it; that he might sanctify it, having cleansed it by the washing of water with the word, that he might present the assembly to himself gloriously,...
Therefore he is also able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, seeing that he lives forever to make intercession for them.
for my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared before the face of all peoples; a light for revelation to the nations, and the glory of your people Israel.”
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the assemblies. To him who overcomes, to him I will give of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, and on the stone a new name written, which no one knows but he who...
I saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared like a bride adorned for her husband.
“Behold, I come quickly. My reward is with me, to repay to each man according to his work.
For you are a holy people to Yahweh your God. Yahweh your God has chosen you to be a people for his own possession, above all peoples who are on the face of the earth.
I will betroth you to me forever. Yes, I will betroth you to me in righteousness, in justice, in loving kindness, and in compassion. I will even betroth you to me in faithfulness; and you shall know Yahweh.
I will restore your judges as at the first, and your counselors as at the beginning. Afterward you shall be called ‘The city of righteousness, a faithful town.’
The voice of one who calls out, “Prepare the way of Yahweh in the wilderness! Make a level highway in the desert for our God. Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low. The uneven shall be made level, and...
You who tell good news to Zion, go up on a high mountain. You who tell good news to Jerusalem, lift up your voice with strength! Lift it up! Don’t be afraid! Say to the cities of Judah, “Behold, your God!” Behold, the Lord Yahweh will come...
How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, who publishes peace, who brings good news, who proclaims salvation, who says to Zion, “Your God reigns!” Your watchmen lift up their voice. Together they sing; for...
Your watchmen lift up their voice. Together they sing; for they shall see eye to eye when Yahweh returns to Zion.
For your Maker is your husband; Yahweh of Armies is his name. The Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer. He will be called the God of the whole earth. For Yahweh has called you as a wife forsaken and grieved in spirit, even a wife of youth,...
For your Maker is your husband; Yahweh of Armies is his name. The Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer. He will be called the God of the whole earth. For Yahweh has called you as a wife forsaken and grieved in spirit, even a wife of youth,...
You will leave your name for a curse to my chosen; and the Lord Yahweh will kill you. He will call his servants by another name,
For Yahweh has ransomed Jacob, and redeemed him from the hand of him who was stronger than he. They will come and sing in the height of Zion, and will flow to the goodness of Yahweh, to the grain, to the new wine, to the oil, and to the...
Yahweh, your God, is among you, a mighty one who will save. He will rejoice over you with joy. He will calm you in his love. He will rejoice over you with singing.
The gospel clarity of Isaiah 62 is that the Lord does not merely forgive private guilt; He publicly vindicates, renames, delights in, redeems, and gathers His people. Their shame is not final because the Savior comes. Their desolation is not permanent because the Lord delights in them. Their identity is not defined by exile or abandonment but by the Lord’s own mouth: Holy People, Redeemed of the Lord, Sought After, City No Longer Deserted.
In Christ, the Savior comes with salvation, secures His bride, gives a new identity, and makes His people holy and redeemed.
- Divine initiative - The speaker refuses silence until Zion’s salvation and righteousness shine.
- Public vindication - Nations and kings see Zion’s righteousness and glory.
- New identity - Zion receives a new name from the mouth of the Lord.
- Shame reversed - Deserted and Desolate are replaced by My Delight Is in Her and Married.
- Covenant delight - The Lord delights in Zion and rejoices over her.
- Intercession - Watchmen continually call on the Lord until restoration is established.
- Enemy loss reversed - The Lord swears enemies will no longer consume the people’s harvest.
- Savior comes - Daughter Zion is told that her Savior comes with reward and recompense.
- Redeemed and holy people - The people are named Holy People and Redeemed of the Lord.
- Canonical fulfillment - Christ the Savior and Bridegroom redeems a holy people and prepares the final city of God.
But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, that you may proclaim the excellence of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.
Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old things have passed away. Behold, all things have become new.
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the assembly, and gave himself up for it; that he might sanctify it, having cleansed it by the washing of water with the word, that he might present the assembly to himself gloriously,...
Therefore he is also able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, seeing that he lives forever to make intercession for them.
for my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared before the face of all peoples; a light for revelation to the nations, and the glory of your people Israel.”
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the assemblies. To him who overcomes, to him I will give of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, and on the stone a new name written, which no one knows but he who...
I saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared like a bride adorned for her husband.
“Behold, I come quickly. My reward is with me, to repay to each man according to his work.
Primary Emphasis
Isaiah 62 contributes to Christ-centered hope by developing Zion’s salvation, new name, wedding joy, watchman prayer, highway preparation, and the coming Savior with reward. In the New Testament, Christ is the Savior who comes to Zion, the bridegroom who rejoices over and secures His bride, and the one whose salvation creates a holy and redeemed people. The highway and banner themes connect with gospel proclamation to the nations, while the city no longer deserted anticipates the New Jerusalem prepared as a bride.
Chapter Contribution
Isaiah 62 argues that the Lord is personally committed to Zion’s full public restoration. He will not leave her righteousness hidden, her salvation dim, her shame unnamed, her watchmen silent, her harvest stolen, her path blocked, or her people unidentified. He gives a new name, establishes intercession, swears by His own power, announces salvation, and names His people holy and redeemed.
Canonical Trajectory
- Zion’s righteousness shining anticipates the righteousness revealed in Christ and displayed in His redeemed people.
- The new name anticipates the identity Christ gives to His people and the new-name promises in Revelation.
- The bridegroom rejoicing over the bride anticipates Christ the bridegroom and the church as His bride.
- Watchmen who give the Lord no rest anticipate persistent prayer for kingdom fulfillment.
- The divine oath securing harvest anticipates the certainty of God’s covenant promises in Christ.
- The command to prepare the way anticipates the gospel highway and the heralding of salvation.
- The Savior coming with reward anticipates Christ’s coming with recompense.
- The Holy People and Redeemed of the Lord anticipate the church as a holy nation and people purchased by Christ.
- The city no longer deserted anticipates the New Jerusalem as the beloved and inhabited city of God.
God names and establishes His people as holy and sought out.
God rejoices over His redeemed people.
The Lord persistently accomplishes His covenant purposes.
God’s sworn promise secures restoration.
Persistent prayer aligns with God’s covenant purposes.
Righteousness becomes visible before the nations.
Salvation brings a new identity as the redeemed.
The Lord’s purpose for Zion’s righteousness and salvation will not remain silent or unfinished.
Zion’s righteousness will shine publicly before nations and kings.
Zion’s salvation will blaze like a torch and be announced to the ends of the earth.
The Lord gives a new name that replaces shame and desolation.
The Lord delights in and rejoices over His restored people.
Watchmen are appointed to call on the Lord persistently until His promise is established.
The Lord swears by His right hand and mighty arm to secure His people’s harvest.
The Savior comes with reward and recompense.
The restored people are called the Redeemed of the Lord.
The restored people are called the Holy People.
A banner is raised for the peoples and salvation is announced to the ends of the earth.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Isaiah 62 forms a people who refuse despairing silence, receive a Lord-given name, pray like watchmen, prepare the way for return, announce the Savior’s coming, and live as holy redeemed people whose identity is no longer deserted.
Sense Zion, Jerusalem as covenant center.
Definition The covenant city and symbolic center of the LORD’s redemptive purposes.
References Isaiah 62:1, 62:11
Lexicon Zion, Jerusalem as covenant center.
Why it matters The chapter centers on Zion’s public restoration and renamed identity.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to be silent, keep quiet.
Definition To be silent or refrain from speaking.
References Isaiah 62:1
Lexicon to be silent, keep quiet.
Why it matters The speaker refuses silence until Zion’s restoration is manifest.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to be quiet, rest, be undisturbed.
Definition To be still, quiet, or at rest.
References Isaiah 62:1
Lexicon to be quiet, rest, be undisturbed.
Why it matters The speaker will not rest until Zion’s salvation shines.
Sense righteousness, justice, right order.
Definition Righteousness or justice according to God’s right order.
References Isaiah 62:1–2
Lexicon righteousness, justice, right order.
Why it matters Zion’s righteousness will shine publicly before nations and kings.
Sense to go out, come forth.
Definition To go out, emerge, or come forth.
References Isaiah 62:1
Lexicon to go out, come forth.
Why it matters Zion’s righteousness comes forth like brightness or dawn.
Sense salvation, deliverance.
Definition Rescue, deliverance, or salvation from the LORD.
References Isaiah 62:1, 62:11
Lexicon salvation, deliverance.
Why it matters Zion’s salvation shines like a torch and is announced to Daughter Zion.
Sense torch, flame, firebrand.
Definition A burning torch or flame.
References Isaiah 62:1
Lexicon torch, flame, firebrand.
Why it matters Zion’s salvation will be visible, bright, and unmistakable.
Sense nations, peoples, Gentiles.
Definition Nations or peoples, often non-Israelite peoples.
References Isaiah 62:2
Lexicon nations, peoples, Gentiles.
Why it matters Zion’s righteousness is displayed before the nations.
Sense glory, honor, weight, splendor.
Definition Glory, honor, splendor, or weightiness.
References Isaiah 62:2
Lexicon glory, honor, weight, splendor.
Why it matters Kings will see Zion’s glory as the Lord publicly restores her.
Sense new name, renewed identity.
Definition A new name signifying transformed status and identity.
References Isaiah 62:2
Lexicon new name, renewed identity.
Why it matters The new name comes from the Lord’s mouth and reverses shame.
Sense mouth of the LORD, divine speech.
Definition The LORD’s authoritative speech.
References Isaiah 62:2
Lexicon mouth of the LORD, divine speech.
Why it matters Zion’s identity is established by divine speech.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense crown, wreath.
Definition A crown, wreath, or sign of honor.
References Isaiah 62:3
Lexicon crown, wreath.
Why it matters Zion’s restored honor is pictured as a crown held by the Lord.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense beauty, splendor, glory.
Definition Beauty, glory, ornament, or splendor.
References Isaiah 62:3
Lexicon beauty, splendor, glory.
Why it matters The crown is marked by splendor, showing restored honor.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense royal diadem, turban/crown of royalty.
Definition A royal headpiece or diadem.
References Isaiah 62:3
Lexicon royal diadem, turban/crown of royalty.
Why it matters Zion is restored to royal dignity in God’s hand.
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense forsaken, abandoned, deserted.
Definition Abandoned or forsaken.
References Isaiah 62:4
Lexicon forsaken, abandoned, deserted.
Why it matters The Lord removes the old shame-name of forsakenness.
Sense desolation, wasteland.
Definition A desolate, ruined, or devastated place.
References Isaiah 62:4
Lexicon desolation, wasteland.
Why it matters Desolation is no longer Zion’s defining identity.
Sense my delight is in her.
Definition A name meaning the LORD’s delight is in her.
References Isaiah 62:4
Lexicon my delight is in her.
Why it matters The Lord replaces forsakenness with covenant delight.
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense married, possessed in marriage.
Definition Married or brought into marital belonging.
References Isaiah 62:4
Lexicon married, possessed in marriage.
Why it matters The land’s desolation is reversed through covenant marriage imagery.
Sense to delight in, take pleasure.
Definition To delight in, desire, or take pleasure in.
References Isaiah 62:4
Lexicon to delight in, take pleasure.
Why it matters The Lord’s delight is the basis for Zion’s new name.
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense to marry, possess as husband, rule.
Definition To marry or enter marital relationship.
References Isaiah 62:4–5
Lexicon to marry, possess as husband, rule.
Why it matters Marriage imagery depicts restored covenant belonging and delight.
Sense your sons / your builder; textually discussed phrase.
Definition The Hebrew can be understood in relation to sons/builders; many translations render with sons, some interpret the LORD as builder in the imagery.
References Isaiah 62:5
Lexicon your sons / your builder; textually discussed phrase.
Why it matters The verse’s marriage imagery speaks of restored relationship, belonging, and renewed life for Zion.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense bridegroom.
Definition A groom in wedding celebration.
References Isaiah 62:5
Lexicon bridegroom.
Why it matters God rejoices over Zion like a bridegroom over His bride.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to rejoice, exult.
Definition To rejoice, exult, or be glad.
References Isaiah 62:5
Lexicon to rejoice, exult.
Why it matters The Lord’s restoration includes divine joy over His people.
Sense watchmen, guards, keepers.
Definition Those who watch, guard, keep, or maintain vigilance.
References Isaiah 62:6
Lexicon watchmen, guards, keepers.
Why it matters The Lord appoints watchmen to continual intercession for Jerusalem.
Sense wall, city wall.
Definition A protective city wall.
References Isaiah 62:6
Lexicon wall, city wall.
Why it matters Watchmen on the walls signify vigilance over Jerusalem’s restoration.
Sense to remember, make mention, call to mind.
Definition To remember, mention, or cause to be remembered.
References Isaiah 62:6
Lexicon to remember, make mention, call to mind.
Why it matters Those who call on or make mention of the Lord persist in intercessory remembrance.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense silence, rest, quiet.
Definition Silence, stillness, or rest.
References Isaiah 62:6–7
Lexicon silence, rest, quiet.
Why it matters Intercessors give themselves no rest and give the Lord no rest until fulfillment.
Form in passage Polel · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to establish, make firm, set up.
Definition To establish, secure, or make firm.
References Isaiah 62:7
Lexicon to establish, make firm, set up.
Why it matters The goal of intercession is Jerusalem firmly established by the Lord.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense praise, renown.
Definition Praise, song, or renown.
References Isaiah 62:7, 62:9
Lexicon praise, renown.
Why it matters Jerusalem is to become the praise of the earth, and harvest is enjoyed in praise to the Lord.
Sense to swear, take an oath.
Definition To swear an oath or make a solemn promise.
References Isaiah 62:8
Lexicon to swear, take an oath.
Why it matters The Lord solemnly guarantees harvest security.
Sense right hand, strength, power.
Definition Right hand as symbol of power and favor.
References Isaiah 62:8
Lexicon right hand, strength, power.
Why it matters The Lord swears by His own powerful right hand.
Sense arm of strength, mighty arm.
Definition Arm as symbol of strength and saving power.
References Isaiah 62:8
Lexicon arm of strength, mighty arm.
Why it matters The oath is anchored in the Lord’s own power.
Sense grain, cereal crop.
Definition Grain or produce of the field.
References Isaiah 62:8–9
Lexicon grain, cereal crop.
Why it matters The Lord promises enemies will no longer consume Zion’s grain.
Sense new wine, fresh grape product.
Definition New wine or fresh produce of the vine.
References Isaiah 62:8–9
Lexicon new wine, fresh grape product.
Why it matters The restored people enjoy the fruit of vineyard labor in the Lord’s presence.
Sense courts of my holy place.
Definition The courts or enclosed areas of the LORD’s sanctuary.
References Isaiah 62:9
Lexicon courts of my holy place.
Why it matters Harvest enjoyment is tied to worship and praise in the Lord’s presence.
Form in passage Qal · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to pass through, cross over.
Definition To pass through or cross over.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon to pass through, cross over.
Why it matters The repeated command intensifies the movement of preparation and return.
Sense gate, city entrance.
Definition A gate or entrance into a city.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon gate, city entrance.
Why it matters The way is opened through the gates for the people’s return.
Form in passage Piel · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to clear, turn, prepare.
Definition To turn, clear, or prepare a way.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon to clear, turn, prepare.
Why it matters The way is actively prepared for the people.
Sense way, road, path.
Definition A road, path, or route.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon way, road, path.
Why it matters The prepared way signals return, access, and restoration.
Form in passage Qal · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to build up, cast up a road.
Definition To raise, construct, or build up a road or highway.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon to build up, cast up a road.
Why it matters The highway must be raised and prepared for the returning people.
Sense highway, raised road.
Definition A highway or raised road prepared for travel.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon highway, raised road.
Why it matters The highway imagery links restoration with return and access for the people.
Form in passage Piel · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense clear stones, remove obstacles.
Definition To clear away stones from a path.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon clear stones, remove obstacles.
Why it matters Restoration includes removing obstacles that hinder the people’s way.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense banner, signal, standard.
Definition A raised signal, banner, or standard for gathering and direction.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon banner, signal, standard.
Why it matters The banner is raised for the peoples, signaling visible proclamation and gathering.
Sense people, peoples.
Definition A people group or peoples collectively.
References Isaiah 62:10
Lexicon people, peoples.
Why it matters The restoration has a peoples-facing horizon.
Form in passage Both · Singular · Construct What is this?
Sense end of the earth, extremities of the land/earth.
Definition The farthest reaches of the earth.
References Isaiah 62:11
Lexicon end of the earth, extremities of the land/earth.
Why it matters The Lord’s salvation announcement is global in horizon.
Sense Daughter Zion, personified Zion.
Definition Zion personified as a daughter or woman.
References Isaiah 62:11
Lexicon Daughter Zion, personified Zion.
Why it matters The salvation announcement is tenderly addressed to personified Zion.
Sense your salvation / your Savior.
Definition Salvation or saving deliverer, depending on translation and construal.
References Isaiah 62:11
Lexicon your salvation / your Savior.
Why it matters Daughter Zion is told that salvation/Savior comes, forming a major messianic and redemptive announcement.
Sense reward, wages, recompense.
Definition Reward, payment, or wages.
References Isaiah 62:11
Lexicon reward, wages, recompense.
Why it matters The coming Savior brings reward with Him.
Sense work, recompense, reward.
Definition Work, wages, recompense, or reward.
References Isaiah 62:11
Lexicon work, recompense, reward.
Why it matters The Savior’s coming includes recompense, linking salvation and righteous outcome.
Sense holy people, people set apart.
Definition A people set apart for the LORD.
References Isaiah 62:12
Lexicon holy people, people set apart.
Why it matters The restored are identified by holiness belonging to the Lord.
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense redeemed, ransomed, rescued.
Definition Those redeemed or rescued by a redeemer.
References Isaiah 62:12
Lexicon redeemed, ransomed, rescued.
Why it matters The people’s holiness is grounded in the Lord’s redemption.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense sought, cared for, sought after.
Definition Sought after, cared for, or desired.
References Isaiah 62:12
Lexicon sought, cared for, sought after.
Why it matters The city once deserted is now sought after by the Lord.
Form in passage Niphal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Feminine · Singular What is this?
Sense city not forsaken/deserted.
Definition A city no longer abandoned or forsaken.
References Isaiah 62:12
Lexicon city not forsaken/deserted.
Why it matters The final name reverses the old identity of abandonment.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
Isaiah 62 forms a people who refuse despairing silence, receive a Lord-given name, pray like watchmen, prepare the way for return, announce the Savior’s coming, and live as holy redeemed people whose identity is no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
- Promise-shaped speech - Speak and pray according to what the Lord has promised rather than what shame has named.
- Identity renunciation - Renounce false names that contradict redemption, holiness, and the Lord’s delight.
- Watchman prayer - Establish regular intercession for God’s people to shine in righteousness and salvation.
- Persistent remembrance - Give Yourself no rest in prayer when praying according to God’s revealed will.
- Oath-based trust - Rest in God’s sworn faithfulness rather than visible circumstances.
- Obstacle removal - Identify and remove barriers in teaching, worship, discipleship, communication, and care.
- Banner raising - Make the gospel visible, plain, and public before the peoples.
- Savior proclamation - Announce Christ clearly as Savior, Judge, Rewarder, and Redeemer.
- Redeemed holiness - Let redemption produce holy conduct, not casual identity language.
- Praise from provision - Turn harvest, provision, and fruitfulness into praise in the Lord’s presence.
- Isaiah 62 is mainly restoration promise, but its warnings are implied through contrast: shame, desolation, foreign loss, and deserted identity are not overcome by self-renaming or self-protection. Only the Lord’s salvation, oath, and redeeming action can reverse them.
- Do not accept shame as the final name over God’s people. - The Lord gives Zion a new name from His own mouth.
- Do not define Zion by former desolation when the Lord has spoken delight. - She will no longer be called Deserted or Desolate.
- Do not separate restoration from righteousness. - The goal is Zion’s righteousness shining like the dawn.
- Do not treat prayer as passive resignation. - Watchmen give themselves no rest and give the Lord no rest.
- Do not trust harvest security apart from the Lord’s oath. - The Lord swears by His right hand and mighty arm.
- Do not leave obstacles in the way of the returning people. - The command is to build up the highway and remove the stones.
- Do not speak of salvation vaguely. - The message is announced: See, Your Savior comes, with reward and recompense.
- Do not call the redeemed common. - They are called the Holy People and the Redeemed of the Lord.
- Treating the chapter as mere patriotic restoration language. - The focus is the Lord’s righteousness, salvation, glory, new naming, covenant delight, intercession, oath, and redeemed holy people.
- Reading the new name as self-reinvention. - The new name comes from the mouth of the Lord, not from Zion’s self-definition.
- Treating marriage imagery as romantic sentiment detached from covenant. - The marriage imagery expresses covenant delight, restored belonging, fruitfulness, and reversal of desolation.
- Using 'give Him no rest' as manipulative prayer. - The watchmen’s persistent prayer aligns with the Lord’s revealed promise to establish Jerusalem.
- Reducing watchmen to political activists or mere critics. - These watchmen are intercessory servants who call on the Lord and refuse silence until He fulfills His promise.
- Treating harvest security as prosperity entitlement. - The promise reverses covenant curse and enemy oppression so that the people may eat, drink, and praise the Lord in His courts.
- Ignoring the highway and banner mission dimension. - The chapter looks beyond Zion to the peoples and the ends of the earth, announcing salvation widely.
- Calling the people holy without redemption. - They are both the Holy People and the Redeemed of the Lord · holiness is grounded in divine redemption.
- Where have I grown silent about promises God has clearly spoken?
- What old names, Deserted, Desolate, Forgotten, Ruined, still functionally define me or my ministry?
- Am I receiving my name from the mouth of the Lord or from failure, critics, wounds, or fear?
- Do I believe the Lord can delight in His redeemed people without compromising His holiness?
- What would it look like for me to serve as a watchman in prayer for my family, church, and community?
- Where have I stopped praying because restoration seemed delayed?
- What stones need to be removed from the path so others can come to the Lord?
- Is my life raising a clear banner for the peoples, or hiding the hope of salvation?
- How should the coming Savior with reward and recompense sober and encourage me?
- What does it mean today to live as the Holy People and Redeemed of the Lord?
- Preaching - Preach Isaiah 62 as the Lord’s public reversal of shame. The structure moves from silence refused, to name changed, to watchmen appointed, to oath sworn, to salvation announced, to identity restored.
- Counseling - Use the old-name/new-name pattern to help believers distinguish between shame labels and names given by the Lord. Keep the focus on redemption and holiness, not self-esteem alone.
- Prayer ministry - Use verses 6–7 to train intercessors in promise-shaped persistence. This is not nagging God into compassion · it is refusing to let go of what God has promised.
- Church renewal - Use the watchman imagery to call leaders and prayer teams to vigilant intercession for the church’s righteousness, salvation, and public witness.
- Evangelism - Use verse 11 to announce clearly: the Savior comes. Salvation is not an abstract idea but the arrival of the Lord’s saving King.
- Discipleship - Teach believers to live from the identity 'Holy People' and 'Redeemed of the Lord.' Holiness and redemption belong together.
- Leadership - Use 'remove the stones' as a leadership audit: what unnecessary obstacles hinder people from hearing, understanding, repenting, worshiping, and serving?
- Worship - Use the harvest-praise connection to teach that provision should return as thanksgiving in the Lord’s courts.
- Missions - Raise the banner for the peoples. The chapter’s horizon reaches the ends of the earth, so the church’s witness must not be parochial.
- Preaching - Preach Isaiah 62 as the Lord’s renaming of a shamed people. The old names are Deserted and Desolate · the new names are My Delight Is in Her, Married, Holy People, Redeemed, Sought After, and No Longer Deserted.
- Preaching - Do not preach the new name as self-help identity reconstruction. The name comes from the mouth of the Lord.
- Preaching - Use the crown imagery to show how securely the Lord holds His restored people.
- Preaching - Preach the bridegroom imagery through the wider canon, culminating in Christ and His bride.
- Preaching - Use the watchman section to call the church to persistent intercession grounded in God’s promises.
- Preaching - Use the oath section to strengthen assurance: the Lord swears by His own right hand and mighty arm.
- Preaching - Use the highway section to move from prayer to mission: remove stones, raise the banner, announce the Savior.
- Preaching - End with verse 12 as a gospel identity declaration: Holy People, Redeemed of the Lord, Sought After, City No Longer Deserted.
- Teaching - Trace new-name theology from Abraham and Sarah to Isaiah 62 to Revelation 2–3.
- Teaching - Compare Isaiah 62’s marriage imagery with Isaiah 54, Hosea 2, Ephesians 5, and Revelation 19–21.
- Teaching - Teach watchman prayer as promise-aligned intercession, not divine manipulation.
- Teaching - Trace prepare-the-way language from Isaiah 40, 57, 62, and the Gospel opening texts.
- Counseling - Use old-name/new-name categories to help believers name false identities formed by abandonment, trauma, failure, or shame.
- Counseling - Anchor restored identity in the Lord’s redemption and holiness, not mere positive thinking.
- Counseling - Use divine delight carefully for believers who struggle to believe God can rejoice over redeemed people.
- PrayerMinistry - Build intercessory prayer rhythms around verses 6–7, praying for righteousness, salvation, restoration, and public witness.
- PrayerMinistry - Teach prayer teams to give the Lord no rest concerning what He has promised, while humbly submitting to His timing and wisdom.
- ChurchLeadership - Use 'remove the stones' to examine avoidable obstacles in discipleship, evangelism, website communication, worship flow, counseling access, and member care.
- ChurchLeadership - Use 'raise a banner for the peoples' to clarify public witness and gospel visibility.
- Missions - Connect the ends-of-earth announcement with gospel mission. Salvation must be proclaimed beyond the local city.
- Missions - Use the banner language to frame mission as visible proclamation of the Savior.
- Worship - Use harvest and sanctuary court imagery to call the congregation to praise the Lord for provision and restoration.
- Worship - Use the new names as responsive readings or prayer prompts centered on redemption.
- Discipleship - Teach believers to live consistently with holy and redeemed identity.
- Discipleship - Train disciples to move from receiving a name to practicing holiness, prayer, witness, and obstacle removal.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
God’s people must not keep answering to names the Lord has removed. The church must pray, proclaim, and live as those whom the Savior has made holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Isaiah 62 declares that Zion’s righteousness and salvation will shine, she will receive a new name, her shame will become covenant delight, watchmen will intercede without rest, the Lord will secure her harvest, the way will be prepared, the Savior will come, and the people will be called holy, redeemed, sought after, and no longer deserted.
Deserted and Desolate versus My Delight Is in Her, Married, Holy People, Redeemed, Sought After, and City No Longer Deserted.
The Lord publicly vindicates, renames, delights in, protects, and redeems His people through His own saving commitment.
Receive identity from the Lord’s mouth, pray like watchmen, remove obstacles, raise the gospel banner, announce the coming Savior, and live as the holy redeemed people of God.
Focus Points
- Divine resolve
- Righteousness shining
- Salvation blazing
- New name
- Royal honor
- Covenant delight
- Marriage imagery
- Watchman intercession
- Sworn protection
- Prepared way
- Coming Savior
- Redeemed identity
- Divine Zeal
- Righteousness
- Salvation
- New Identity
- Intercession
- Divine Oath
- Savior
- Redemption
- Holiness
- Mission to the Peoples
Passages
Chapter opening: Isaiah 62:1-5
Isa 62:6-7 Watchmen stationed upon the walls of Zion (says the third strophe) do not forsake Jehovah till He has fulfilled all His promise. “Upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, have I stationed watchmen; all the day and all the night continually they are not silent. O ye who remember Jehovah, leave yourselves no rest! And give Him no rest, till He raise up, and till He set Jerusalem for a praise in the earth.
” As the phrase hiphqı̄d ‛al signifies to make a person an overseer (president) over anything, it seems as though we ought to render the sentence before us, “I have set watchmen over thy walls. ” But hiphqı̄d by itself may also mean “to appoint” (2Ki 25:23), and therefore עלח־ומתיך may indicate the place of appointment (lxx ἐπὶ τῶν τειχέων σου, upon thy walls: ̔Ιερουσαλήμ κατέστησα φύλακας).
Those who are stationed upon the walls are no doubt keepers of the walls; not, however, as persons whose exclusive duty it is to keep the walls, but as those who have committed to them the guarding of the city both within and without (Sol 5:7). The appointment of such watchmen presupposes the existence of the city, which is thus to be watched from the walls.
It is therefore inadmissible to think of the walls of Jerusalem as still lying in ruins, as the majority of commentators have done, and to understand by the watchmen pious Israelites, who pray for their restoration, or (according to b. Menachoth 87 a ; cf. , Zec 1:12) angelic intercessors. The walls intended are those of the city, which, though once destroyed, is actually imperishable (Isa 49:16) and has now been raised up again.
And who else could the watchmen stationed upon the walls really be, but prophets who are called tsōphı̄m (e. g. , Isa 52:8), and whose calling, according to Ezek 33, is that of watchmen? And if prophets are meant, who else can the person appointing them be but Jehovah Himself? The idea that the author of these prophecies is speaking of himself, as having appointed the shōmerı̄m , must therefore be rejected.
Jehovah gives to the restored Jerusalem faithful prophets, whom He stations upon the walls of the city, that they may see far and wide, and be heard afar off. And from those walls does their warning cry on behalf of the holy city committed to their care ascent day and night to Jehovah, and their testimony go round about to the world. For after Jerusalem has been restored and re-peopled, the further end to be attained is this, that Jehovah should build up the newly founded city within ( cōnēn the consequence of bânâh , Num 21:27, and ‛âsâh , Isa 45:18; Deu 32:6; cf.
, Isa 54:14 and Psa 87:5), and help it to attain the central post of honour in relation to those without, which He has destined for it. Such prophets of the times succeeding the captivity ( nebhı̄'ı̄m 'achărōnı̄m ; cf. , Zec 1:4) were Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. Haggai stands upon the walls of Jerusalem, and proclaims the glory of the second temple as surpassing that of the first.
Zechariah points from Joshua and Zerubbabel onwards to the sprout of Jehovah, who is priest and prince in one person, and builds the true temple of God. Malachi predicts the coming of the Lord to His temple, and the rising of the Sun of righteousness. Under the eyes of these prophets the city of God rose up again, and they stand upon its pinnacles, and look thence into the glorious future that awaits it, and hasten its approach through the word of their testimony.
Such prophets, who carry the good of their people day and night upon their anxious praying hearts, does Jehovah give to the Jerusalem after the captivity, which is one in the prophet’s view with the Jerusalem of the last days; and in so lively a manner does the prophet here call them up before his own mind, that he exclaims to them, “Ye who remind Jehovah, to finish gloriously the gracious work which He has begun,” give yourselves to rest ( dŏmi from dâmâh = dâmam , to grow dumb, i. e.
, to cease speaking or working, in distinction from châshâh , to be silent, i. e. , not to speak or work), and allow Him no rest till He puts Jerusalem in the right state, and so glorifies it, that it shall be recognised and extolled as glorious over all the earth. Prophecy here sees the final glory of the church as one that gradually unfolds itself, and that not without human instrumentality.
The prophets of the last times, with their zeal in prayer, and in the exercise of their calling as witnesses, form a striking contrast to the blind, dumb, indolent, sleepy hirelings of the prophet’s own time (Isa 56:10).
Isa 62:6-7 Watchmen stationed upon the walls of Zion (says the third strophe) do not forsake Jehovah till He has fulfilled all His promise. “Upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, have I stationed watchmen; all the day and all the night continually they are not silent. O ye who remember Jehovah, leave yourselves no rest! And give Him no rest, till He raise up, and till He set Jerusalem for a praise in the earth.
” As the phrase hiphqı̄d ‛al signifies to make a person an overseer (president) over anything, it seems as though we ought to render the sentence before us, “I have set watchmen over thy walls. ” But hiphqı̄d by itself may also mean “to appoint” (2Ki 25:23), and therefore עלח־ומתיך may indicate the place of appointment (lxx ἐπὶ τῶν τειχέων σου, upon thy walls: ̔Ιερουσαλήμ κατέστησα φύλακας).
Those who are stationed upon the walls are no doubt keepers of the walls; not, however, as persons whose exclusive duty it is to keep the walls, but as those who have committed to them the guarding of the city both within and without (Sol 5:7). The appointment of such watchmen presupposes the existence of the city, which is thus to be watched from the walls.
It is therefore inadmissible to think of the walls of Jerusalem as still lying in ruins, as the majority of commentators have done, and to understand by the watchmen pious Israelites, who pray for their restoration, or (according to b. Menachoth 87 a ; cf. , Zec 1:12) angelic intercessors. The walls intended are those of the city, which, though once destroyed, is actually imperishable (Isa 49:16) and has now been raised up again.
And who else could the watchmen stationed upon the walls really be, but prophets who are called tsōphı̄m (e. g. , Isa 52:8), and whose calling, according to Ezek 33, is that of watchmen? And if prophets are meant, who else can the person appointing them be but Jehovah Himself? The idea that the author of these prophecies is speaking of himself, as having appointed the shōmerı̄m , must therefore be rejected.
Jehovah gives to the restored Jerusalem faithful prophets, whom He stations upon the walls of the city, that they may see far and wide, and be heard afar off. And from those walls does their warning cry on behalf of the holy city committed to their care ascent day and night to Jehovah, and their testimony go round about to the world. For after Jerusalem has been restored and re-peopled, the further end to be attained is this, that Jehovah should build up the newly founded city within ( cōnēn the consequence of bânâh , Num 21:27, and ‛âsâh , Isa 45:18; Deu 32:6; cf.
, Isa 54:14 and Psa 87:5), and help it to attain the central post of honour in relation to those without, which He has destined for it. Such prophets of the times succeeding the captivity ( nebhı̄'ı̄m 'achărōnı̄m ; cf. , Zec 1:4) were Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. Haggai stands upon the walls of Jerusalem, and proclaims the glory of the second temple as surpassing that of the first.
Zechariah points from Joshua and Zerubbabel onwards to the sprout of Jehovah, who is priest and prince in one person, and builds the true temple of God. Malachi predicts the coming of the Lord to His temple, and the rising of the Sun of righteousness. Under the eyes of these prophets the city of God rose up again, and they stand upon its pinnacles, and look thence into the glorious future that awaits it, and hasten its approach through the word of their testimony.
Such prophets, who carry the good of their people day and night upon their anxious praying hearts, does Jehovah give to the Jerusalem after the captivity, which is one in the prophet’s view with the Jerusalem of the last days; and in so lively a manner does the prophet here call them up before his own mind, that he exclaims to them, “Ye who remind Jehovah, to finish gloriously the gracious work which He has begun,” give yourselves to rest ( dŏmi from dâmâh = dâmam , to grow dumb, i. e.
, to cease speaking or working, in distinction from châshâh , to be silent, i. e. , not to speak or work), and allow Him no rest till He puts Jerusalem in the right state, and so glorifies it, that it shall be recognised and extolled as glorious over all the earth. Prophecy here sees the final glory of the church as one that gradually unfolds itself, and that not without human instrumentality.
The prophets of the last times, with their zeal in prayer, and in the exercise of their calling as witnesses, form a striking contrast to the blind, dumb, indolent, sleepy hirelings of the prophet’s own time (Isa 56:10).
Isa 62:8-9 The following strophe expresses one side of the divine promise, on which the hope of that lofty and universally acknowledged glory of Jerusalem, for whose completion the watchers upon its walls so ceaselessly exert themselves, is founded. “Jehovah hath sworn by His right hand, and by His powerful arm, Surely I no more give thy corn for food to thine enemies; and foreigners will to drink thy must, for which thou hast laboured hard.
No, they that gather it in shall eat it, and praise Jehovah; and they that store it, shall drink it in the courts of my sanctuary. ” The church will no more succumb to the tyranny of a worldly power. Peace undisturbed, and unrestricted freedom, reign there. With praise to Jehovah are the fruits of the land enjoyed by those who raised and reaped them. יגעתּ (with an auxiliary pathach , as in Isa 47:12, Isa 47:15) is applied to the cultivation of the soil, and includes the service of the heathen who are incorporated in Israel (Isa 61:5); whilst אסּף (whence מאספיו with ס raphatum ) or אסף ( poel , whence the reading מאספיו, cf.
, Psa 101:5, meloshnı̄ ; Psa 109:10, ve - dorshū , for which in some codd. and editions we find מאספיו, an intermediate form between piel and poel ; see at Psa 62:4) and קבּץ stand in the same relation to one another as condere ( horreo ) and colligere (cf. , Isa 11:12). The expression bechatsrōth qodshı̄ , in the courts of my sanctuary, cannot imply that the produce of the harvest will never be consumed anywhere else than there (which is inconceivable), but only that their enjoyment of the harvest-produce will be consecrated by festal meals of worship, with an allusion to the legal regulation that two-tenths ( ma‛ăsēr shēnı̄ ) should be eaten in a holy place ( liphnē Jehovah ) by the original possessor and his family, with the addition of the Levites and the poor (Deu 14:22-27 : see Saalschütz, Mosaisches Recht , cap.
42). Such thoughts, as that all Israel will then be a priestly nation, or that all Jerusalem will be holy, are not implied in this promise. All that it affirms is, that the enjoyment of the harvest-blessing will continue henceforth undisturbed, and be accompanied with the grateful worship of the giver, and therefore, because sanctified by thanksgiving, will become an act of worship in itself.
This is what Jehovah has sworn “by His right hand,” which He only lifts up with truth, and “by His powerful arm,” which carries out what it promises without the possibility of resistance. The Talmud ( b. Nazir 3 b ) understand by עזו זרוע the left arm, after Dan 12:7; but the ו of ובזרוע is epexegetical.
Isa 62:8-9 The following strophe expresses one side of the divine promise, on which the hope of that lofty and universally acknowledged glory of Jerusalem, for whose completion the watchers upon its walls so ceaselessly exert themselves, is founded. “Jehovah hath sworn by His right hand, and by His powerful arm, Surely I no more give thy corn for food to thine enemies; and foreigners will to drink thy must, for which thou hast laboured hard.
No, they that gather it in shall eat it, and praise Jehovah; and they that store it, shall drink it in the courts of my sanctuary. ” The church will no more succumb to the tyranny of a worldly power. Peace undisturbed, and unrestricted freedom, reign there. With praise to Jehovah are the fruits of the land enjoyed by those who raised and reaped them. יגעתּ (with an auxiliary pathach , as in Isa 47:12, Isa 47:15) is applied to the cultivation of the soil, and includes the service of the heathen who are incorporated in Israel (Isa 61:5); whilst אסּף (whence מאספיו with ס raphatum ) or אסף ( poel , whence the reading מאספיו, cf.
, Psa 101:5, meloshnı̄ ; Psa 109:10, ve - dorshū , for which in some codd. and editions we find מאספיו, an intermediate form between piel and poel ; see at Psa 62:4) and קבּץ stand in the same relation to one another as condere ( horreo ) and colligere (cf. , Isa 11:12). The expression bechatsrōth qodshı̄ , in the courts of my sanctuary, cannot imply that the produce of the harvest will never be consumed anywhere else than there (which is inconceivable), but only that their enjoyment of the harvest-produce will be consecrated by festal meals of worship, with an allusion to the legal regulation that two-tenths ( ma‛ăsēr shēnı̄ ) should be eaten in a holy place ( liphnē Jehovah ) by the original possessor and his family, with the addition of the Levites and the poor (Deu 14:22-27 : see Saalschütz, Mosaisches Recht , cap.
42). Such thoughts, as that all Israel will then be a priestly nation, or that all Jerusalem will be holy, are not implied in this promise. All that it affirms is, that the enjoyment of the harvest-blessing will continue henceforth undisturbed, and be accompanied with the grateful worship of the giver, and therefore, because sanctified by thanksgiving, will become an act of worship in itself.
This is what Jehovah has sworn “by His right hand,” which He only lifts up with truth, and “by His powerful arm,” which carries out what it promises without the possibility of resistance. The Talmud ( b. Nazir 3 b ) understand by עזו זרוע the left arm, after Dan 12:7; but the ו of ובזרוע is epexegetical.
Isa 62:10-12 The concluding strophe goes back to the standpoint of the captivity. “Go forth, go forth through the gates, clear the way of the people. Cast up, cast up the road, clear it of stones; lift up a banner above the nations! Behold, Jehovah hath caused tidings to sound to the end of the earth. Say to the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy salvation cometh; behold, His reward is with Him, and His recompense before Him.
And men will call them the holy people, the redeemed of Jehovah; and men will call thee, Striven after, A city that will not be forsaken. ” We cannot adopt the rendering proposed by Gesenius, “Go ye into the gates,” whether of Jerusalem or of the temple, since the reading would then be שׁערים בּאוּ (Gen 23:10) or בשּׁערים (Jer 7:2). For although בּ עבר may under certain circumstances be applied to entrance into a city (Jdg 9:26), yet it generally denotes either passing through a land (Isa 8:21; Isa 34:10; Gen 41:46; Lev 26:6, etc.)
, or through a nation (2Sa 20:14), or through a certain place (Isa 10:28); so that the phrase בּשּׁער עבר, which does not occur anywhere else (for in Mic 2:13, which refers, however, to the Exodus of the people out of the gates of the cities of the captivity, שׁער ויּעברוּ do not belong together), must refer to passing through the gate; and the cry בשׁערים עברוּ means just the same as מבּבל צאוּ (“Go ye forth from Babylon”) in Isa 48:20; Isa 52:11. The call to go out of Babylon forms the conclusion of the prophecy here, just as it does in Isa 48:20-21; Isa 52:11-12.
It is addressed to the exiles; but who are they to whom the command is given, “Throw up a way,” - a summons repeatedly found in all the three books of these prophecies (Isa 40:3; Isa 57:14)? They cannot be the heathen, for this is contradicted by the conclusion of the charge, “Lift ye up a banner above the nations;” nor can we adopt what seems to us a useless fancy on the part of Stier, viz.
, that Isa 62:10 is addressed to the watchmen on the walls of Zion. We have no hesitation, therefore, in concluding that they are the very same persons who are to march through the gates of Babylon. The vanguard (or pioneers) of those who are coming out are here summoned to open the way by which the people are to march, to throw up the road (viz. , by casting up an embankment, hamsillâh , as in Isa 11:16; Isa 49:11; maslūl , Isa 35:8), to clear it of stones ( siqqēl , as in Isa 5:2; cf.
, Hos 9:12, shikkēl mē'âdâm ), and lift up a banner above the nations (one rising so high as to be visible far and wide), that the diaspora of all places may join those who are returning home with the friendly help of the nations (Isa 11:12; Isa 49:22). For Jehovah hath caused tidings to be heard to the end of the earth, i. e. , as we may see from what follows, the tidings of their liberation; in other words, looking at the historical fulfilment, the proclamation of Cyrus, which he caused to be issued throughout his empire at the instigation of Jehovah (Ezr 1:1).
Hitzig regards השׁמיע as expressing what had actually occurred at the time when the prophet uttered his predictions; and in reality the standpoint of the prophets was so far a variable one, that the fulfilment of what was predicted did draw nearer and nearer to it ἐν πνεύματι. But as hinnēh throughout the book of Isaiah, even when followed by a perfect, invariably points to something future, all that can be said is, that the divine announcement of the time of redemption, as having now arrived, stands out before the soul of the prophet with all the certainty of a historical fact.
The conclusion which Knobel draws from the expression “to the end of the earth,” as to the Babylonian standpoint of the prophet, is a false one. In his opinion, “the end of the earth” in such passages as Psa 72:8; Zec 9:10 ( 'aphsē - 'ârets ), and Isa 24:16 ( kenaph hâ'ârets ), signifies the western extremity of the orbis orientalis , that is to say, the region of the Mediterranean, more especially Palestine; whereas it was rather a term applied to the remotest lands which bounded the geographical horizon (compare Isa 42:10; Isa 48:20, with Psa 2:8; Psa 22:28, and other passages).
The words that follow (“Say ye,” etc.) might be taken as a command issued on the ground of the divine hishimiă‛ (“the Lord hath proclaimed”); but hishimiă‛ itself is a word that needs to be supplemented, so that what follows is the divine proclamation: Men everywhere, i. e. , as far as the earth or the dispersion of Israel extends, are to say to the daughter of Zion - that is to say, to the church which has its home in Zion, but is now in foreign lands - that “its salvation cometh,” i.
e. , that Jehovah, its Saviour, is coming to bestow a rich reward upon His church, which has passed through sever punishment, but has been so salutarily refined. Those to whom the words “Say ye,” etc. , are addressed, are not only the prophets of Israel, but all the mourners of Zion, who become mebhasserı̄m , just because they respond to this appeal (compare the meaning of this “Say ye to the daughter of Zion” with Zec 9:9 in Mat 21:5).
The whole of the next clause, “Behold, His reward,” etc. , is a repetition of the prophet’s own words in Isa 40:10. It is a question whether the words “and they shall call thee,” etc. , contain the gospel which is to be proclaimed according to the will of Jehovah to the end of the earth (see Isa 48:20), or whether they are a continuation of the prophecy which commences with “Behold, Jehovah hath proclaimed.
” The latter is the more probable, as the address here passes again into an objective promise. The realization of the gospel, which Jehovah causes to be preached, leads men to call those who are now still in exile “the holy people,” “the redeemed” (lit. ransomed, Isa 51:10; like pedūyē in Isa 35:10). “ And thee ” - thus does the prophecy close by returning to a direct address to Zion-Jerusalem - “thee will men call derūshâh ,” sought assiduously, i.
e. , one whose welfare men, and still more Jehovah, are zealously concerned to promote (compare the opposite in Jer 30:17) - “a city that will not be forsaken,” i. e. , in which men gladly settle, and which will never be without inhabitants again (the antithesis to ‛ăzūbhâh in Isa 60:15), possibly also in the sense that the gracious presence of God will never be withdrawn from it again (the antithesis to ‛ăzūbhâh in Isa 62:4).
נעזבה is the third pers. pr. , like nuchâmâh in Isa 54:11 : the perfect as expressing the abstract present (Ges. §126, 3). The following prophecy anticipates the question, how Israel can possibly rejoice in the recovered possession of its inheritance, if it is still to be surrounded by such malicious neighbours as the Edomites. Sixth Prophecy - Isa 63:1-6 Just as the Ammonites had been characterized by a thirst for extending their territory as well as by cruelty, and the Moabites by boasting and a slanderous disposition, so were the Edomites, although the brother-nation to Israel, characterised from time immemorial by fierce, implacable, bloodthirsty hatred towards Israel, upon which they fell in the most ruthless and malicious manner, whenever it was surrounded by danger or had suffered defeat.
The knavish way in which they acted in the time of Joram, when Jerusalem was surprised and plundered by Philistines and Arabians (2Ch 21:16-17), has been depicted by Obadiah. A large part of the inhabitants of Jerusalem were then taken prisoners, and sold by the conquerors, some to the Phoenicians and some to the Greeks (Oba 1:20; Joe 3:1-8); to the latter through the medium of the Edomites, who were in possession of the port and commercial city of Elath on the Elanitic Gulf (Amo 1:6).
Under the rule of the very same Joram the Edomites had made themselves independent of the house of David (2Ki 8:20; 2Ch 21:10), and a great massacre took place among the Judaeans settled in Idumaea; an act of wickedness for which Joel threatens them with the judgment of God (Joe 3:19), and which was regarded as not yet expiated even in the time of Uzziah, notwithstanding the fact that Amaziah had chastised them (2Ki 14:7), and Uzziah had wrested Elath from them (2Ki 14:22). “Thus saith Jehovah,” was the prophecy of Amos (Amo 1:11-12) in the first half of Uzziah’s reign, “for three transgressions of Edom, ad for four, I will not take it back, because he pursued his brother with the sword, and stifled his compassion, so that his anger tears in pieces for ever, and he keeps his fierce wrath eternally: And I let fire loose upon Teman, and it devours the palaces of Bozrah.
” So also at the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, and the carrying away of the people, Edom took the side of the Chaldeans, rejoiced over Israel’s defeat, and flattered itself that it should eventually rule over the territory that had hitherto belonged to Israel. They availed themselves of this opportunity to slake their thirst for revenge upon Israel, placing themselves at the service of its enemies, delivering up fugitive Judaeans or else massacring them, and really obtaining possession of the southern portion of Judaea, viz.
, Hebron (1 Macc. 5:65; cf. , Josephus, Wars of the Jews , iv 9, 7). With a retrospective glance at these, the latest manifestations of eternal enmity, Edom is threatened with divine vengeance by Jeremiah in the prophecy contained in Jer 49:7-22, which is taken for the most part from Obadiah; also in the Lamentations (Lam 4:21-22), as well as by Ezekiel (Eze 25:12-14, and especially Eze 35:1), and by the author of Psa 137:1-9, which looks back upon the time of the captivity.
Edom is not always an emblematical name for the imperial power of the world: this is evident enough from Psa 137:1-9, from Isaiah 21, and also from Isaiah 34 in connection with chapter 13, where the judgment upon Edom is represented as a different one from the judgment upon Babylon. Babylon and Edom are always to be taken literally, so far as the primary meaning of the prophecy is concerned; but they are also representative, Babylon standing for the violent and tyrannical world-power, and Edom for the world as cherishing hostility and manifesting hostility to Israel as Israel, i.
e. , as the people of God. Babylon had no other interest, so far as Israel was concerned, than to subjugate it like other kingdoms, and destroy every possibility of its ever rising again. But Edom, which dwelt in Israel’s immediate neighbourhood, and sprang from the same ancestral house, hated Israel with hereditary mortal hatred, although it knew the God of Israel better than Babylon ever did, because it knew that Israel had deprived it of its birthright, viz.
, the chieftainship. If Israel should have such a people as this, and such neighbouring nations generally round about it, after it had been delivered from the tyranny of the mistress of the world, its peace would still be incessantly threatened. Not only must Babylon fall, but Edom also must be trodden down, before Israel could be redeemed, or be regarded as perfectly redeemed.
The prophecy against Edom which follows here is therefore a well-chosen side-piece to the prophecy against Babel in Isa 47:1-15, at the point of time to which the prophet has been transported.
Isa 62:10-12 The concluding strophe goes back to the standpoint of the captivity. “Go forth, go forth through the gates, clear the way of the people. Cast up, cast up the road, clear it of stones; lift up a banner above the nations! Behold, Jehovah hath caused tidings to sound to the end of the earth. Say to the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy salvation cometh; behold, His reward is with Him, and His recompense before Him.
And men will call them the holy people, the redeemed of Jehovah; and men will call thee, Striven after, A city that will not be forsaken. ” We cannot adopt the rendering proposed by Gesenius, “Go ye into the gates,” whether of Jerusalem or of the temple, since the reading would then be שׁערים בּאוּ (Gen 23:10) or בשּׁערים (Jer 7:2). For although בּ עבר may under certain circumstances be applied to entrance into a city (Jdg 9:26), yet it generally denotes either passing through a land (Isa 8:21; Isa 34:10; Gen 41:46; Lev 26:6, etc.)
, or through a nation (2Sa 20:14), or through a certain place (Isa 10:28); so that the phrase בּשּׁער עבר, which does not occur anywhere else (for in Mic 2:13, which refers, however, to the Exodus of the people out of the gates of the cities of the captivity, שׁער ויּעברוּ do not belong together), must refer to passing through the gate; and the cry בשׁערים עברוּ means just the same as מבּבל צאוּ (“Go ye forth from Babylon”) in Isa 48:20; Isa 52:11. The call to go out of Babylon forms the conclusion of the prophecy here, just as it does in Isa 48:20-21; Isa 52:11-12.
It is addressed to the exiles; but who are they to whom the command is given, “Throw up a way,” - a summons repeatedly found in all the three books of these prophecies (Isa 40:3; Isa 57:14)? They cannot be the heathen, for this is contradicted by the conclusion of the charge, “Lift ye up a banner above the nations;” nor can we adopt what seems to us a useless fancy on the part of Stier, viz.
, that Isa 62:10 is addressed to the watchmen on the walls of Zion. We have no hesitation, therefore, in concluding that they are the very same persons who are to march through the gates of Babylon. The vanguard (or pioneers) of those who are coming out are here summoned to open the way by which the people are to march, to throw up the road (viz. , by casting up an embankment, hamsillâh , as in Isa 11:16; Isa 49:11; maslūl , Isa 35:8), to clear it of stones ( siqqēl , as in Isa 5:2; cf.
, Hos 9:12, shikkēl mē'âdâm ), and lift up a banner above the nations (one rising so high as to be visible far and wide), that the diaspora of all places may join those who are returning home with the friendly help of the nations (Isa 11:12; Isa 49:22). For Jehovah hath caused tidings to be heard to the end of the earth, i. e. , as we may see from what follows, the tidings of their liberation; in other words, looking at the historical fulfilment, the proclamation of Cyrus, which he caused to be issued throughout his empire at the instigation of Jehovah (Ezr 1:1).
Hitzig regards השׁמיע as expressing what had actually occurred at the time when the prophet uttered his predictions; and in reality the standpoint of the prophets was so far a variable one, that the fulfilment of what was predicted did draw nearer and nearer to it ἐν πνεύματι. But as hinnēh throughout the book of Isaiah, even when followed by a perfect, invariably points to something future, all that can be said is, that the divine announcement of the time of redemption, as having now arrived, stands out before the soul of the prophet with all the certainty of a historical fact.
The conclusion which Knobel draws from the expression “to the end of the earth,” as to the Babylonian standpoint of the prophet, is a false one. In his opinion, “the end of the earth” in such passages as Psa 72:8; Zec 9:10 ( 'aphsē - 'ârets ), and Isa 24:16 ( kenaph hâ'ârets ), signifies the western extremity of the orbis orientalis , that is to say, the region of the Mediterranean, more especially Palestine; whereas it was rather a term applied to the remotest lands which bounded the geographical horizon (compare Isa 42:10; Isa 48:20, with Psa 2:8; Psa 22:28, and other passages).
The words that follow (“Say ye,” etc.) might be taken as a command issued on the ground of the divine hishimiă‛ (“the Lord hath proclaimed”); but hishimiă‛ itself is a word that needs to be supplemented, so that what follows is the divine proclamation: Men everywhere, i. e. , as far as the earth or the dispersion of Israel extends, are to say to the daughter of Zion - that is to say, to the church which has its home in Zion, but is now in foreign lands - that “its salvation cometh,” i.
e. , that Jehovah, its Saviour, is coming to bestow a rich reward upon His church, which has passed through sever punishment, but has been so salutarily refined. Those to whom the words “Say ye,” etc. , are addressed, are not only the prophets of Israel, but all the mourners of Zion, who become mebhasserı̄m , just because they respond to this appeal (compare the meaning of this “Say ye to the daughter of Zion” with Zec 9:9 in Mat 21:5).
The whole of the next clause, “Behold, His reward,” etc. , is a repetition of the prophet’s own words in Isa 40:10. It is a question whether the words “and they shall call thee,” etc. , contain the gospel which is to be proclaimed according to the will of Jehovah to the end of the earth (see Isa 48:20), or whether they are a continuation of the prophecy which commences with “Behold, Jehovah hath proclaimed.
” The latter is the more probable, as the address here passes again into an objective promise. The realization of the gospel, which Jehovah causes to be preached, leads men to call those who are now still in exile “the holy people,” “the redeemed” (lit. ransomed, Isa 51:10; like pedūyē in Isa 35:10). “ And thee ” - thus does the prophecy close by returning to a direct address to Zion-Jerusalem - “thee will men call derūshâh ,” sought assiduously, i.
e. , one whose welfare men, and still more Jehovah, are zealously concerned to promote (compare the opposite in Jer 30:17) - “a city that will not be forsaken,” i. e. , in which men gladly settle, and which will never be without inhabitants again (the antithesis to ‛ăzūbhâh in Isa 60:15), possibly also in the sense that the gracious presence of God will never be withdrawn from it again (the antithesis to ‛ăzūbhâh in Isa 62:4).
נעזבה is the third pers. pr. , like nuchâmâh in Isa 54:11 : the perfect as expressing the abstract present (Ges. §126, 3). The following prophecy anticipates the question, how Israel can possibly rejoice in the recovered possession of its inheritance, if it is still to be surrounded by such malicious neighbours as the Edomites. Sixth Prophecy - Isa 63:1-6 Just as the Ammonites had been characterized by a thirst for extending their territory as well as by cruelty, and the Moabites by boasting and a slanderous disposition, so were the Edomites, although the brother-nation to Israel, characterised from time immemorial by fierce, implacable, bloodthirsty hatred towards Israel, upon which they fell in the most ruthless and malicious manner, whenever it was surrounded by danger or had suffered defeat.
The knavish way in which they acted in the time of Joram, when Jerusalem was surprised and plundered by Philistines and Arabians (2Ch 21:16-17), has been depicted by Obadiah. A large part of the inhabitants of Jerusalem were then taken prisoners, and sold by the conquerors, some to the Phoenicians and some to the Greeks (Oba 1:20; Joe 3:1-8); to the latter through the medium of the Edomites, who were in possession of the port and commercial city of Elath on the Elanitic Gulf (Amo 1:6).
Under the rule of the very same Joram the Edomites had made themselves independent of the house of David (2Ki 8:20; 2Ch 21:10), and a great massacre took place among the Judaeans settled in Idumaea; an act of wickedness for which Joel threatens them with the judgment of God (Joe 3:19), and which was regarded as not yet expiated even in the time of Uzziah, notwithstanding the fact that Amaziah had chastised them (2Ki 14:7), and Uzziah had wrested Elath from them (2Ki 14:22). “Thus saith Jehovah,” was the prophecy of Amos (Amo 1:11-12) in the first half of Uzziah’s reign, “for three transgressions of Edom, ad for four, I will not take it back, because he pursued his brother with the sword, and stifled his compassion, so that his anger tears in pieces for ever, and he keeps his fierce wrath eternally: And I let fire loose upon Teman, and it devours the palaces of Bozrah.
” So also at the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, and the carrying away of the people, Edom took the side of the Chaldeans, rejoiced over Israel’s defeat, and flattered itself that it should eventually rule over the territory that had hitherto belonged to Israel. They availed themselves of this opportunity to slake their thirst for revenge upon Israel, placing themselves at the service of its enemies, delivering up fugitive Judaeans or else massacring them, and really obtaining possession of the southern portion of Judaea, viz.
, Hebron (1 Macc. 5:65; cf. , Josephus, Wars of the Jews , iv 9, 7). With a retrospective glance at these, the latest manifestations of eternal enmity, Edom is threatened with divine vengeance by Jeremiah in the prophecy contained in Jer 49:7-22, which is taken for the most part from Obadiah; also in the Lamentations (Lam 4:21-22), as well as by Ezekiel (Eze 25:12-14, and especially Eze 35:1), and by the author of Psa 137:1-9, which looks back upon the time of the captivity.
Edom is not always an emblematical name for the imperial power of the world: this is evident enough from Psa 137:1-9, from Isaiah 21, and also from Isaiah 34 in connection with chapter 13, where the judgment upon Edom is represented as a different one from the judgment upon Babylon. Babylon and Edom are always to be taken literally, so far as the primary meaning of the prophecy is concerned; but they are also representative, Babylon standing for the violent and tyrannical world-power, and Edom for the world as cherishing hostility and manifesting hostility to Israel as Israel, i.
e. , as the people of God. Babylon had no other interest, so far as Israel was concerned, than to subjugate it like other kingdoms, and destroy every possibility of its ever rising again. But Edom, which dwelt in Israel’s immediate neighbourhood, and sprang from the same ancestral house, hated Israel with hereditary mortal hatred, although it knew the God of Israel better than Babylon ever did, because it knew that Israel had deprived it of its birthright, viz.
, the chieftainship. If Israel should have such a people as this, and such neighbouring nations generally round about it, after it had been delivered from the tyranny of the mistress of the world, its peace would still be incessantly threatened. Not only must Babylon fall, but Edom also must be trodden down, before Israel could be redeemed, or be regarded as perfectly redeemed.
The prophecy against Edom which follows here is therefore a well-chosen side-piece to the prophecy against Babel in Isa 47:1-15, at the point of time to which the prophet has been transported.
Isa 62:10-12 The concluding strophe goes back to the standpoint of the captivity. “Go forth, go forth through the gates, clear the way of the people. Cast up, cast up the road, clear it of stones; lift up a banner above the nations! Behold, Jehovah hath caused tidings to sound to the end of the earth. Say to the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy salvation cometh; behold, His reward is with Him, and His recompense before Him.
And men will call them the holy people, the redeemed of Jehovah; and men will call thee, Striven after, A city that will not be forsaken. ” We cannot adopt the rendering proposed by Gesenius, “Go ye into the gates,” whether of Jerusalem or of the temple, since the reading would then be שׁערים בּאוּ (Gen 23:10) or בשּׁערים (Jer 7:2). For although בּ עבר may under certain circumstances be applied to entrance into a city (Jdg 9:26), yet it generally denotes either passing through a land (Isa 8:21; Isa 34:10; Gen 41:46; Lev 26:6, etc.)
, or through a nation (2Sa 20:14), or through a certain place (Isa 10:28); so that the phrase בּשּׁער עבר, which does not occur anywhere else (for in Mic 2:13, which refers, however, to the Exodus of the people out of the gates of the cities of the captivity, שׁער ויּעברוּ do not belong together), must refer to passing through the gate; and the cry בשׁערים עברוּ means just the same as מבּבל צאוּ (“Go ye forth from Babylon”) in Isa 48:20; Isa 52:11. The call to go out of Babylon forms the conclusion of the prophecy here, just as it does in Isa 48:20-21; Isa 52:11-12.
It is addressed to the exiles; but who are they to whom the command is given, “Throw up a way,” - a summons repeatedly found in all the three books of these prophecies (Isa 40:3; Isa 57:14)? They cannot be the heathen, for this is contradicted by the conclusion of the charge, “Lift ye up a banner above the nations;” nor can we adopt what seems to us a useless fancy on the part of Stier, viz.
, that Isa 62:10 is addressed to the watchmen on the walls of Zion. We have no hesitation, therefore, in concluding that they are the very same persons who are to march through the gates of Babylon. The vanguard (or pioneers) of those who are coming out are here summoned to open the way by which the people are to march, to throw up the road (viz. , by casting up an embankment, hamsillâh , as in Isa 11:16; Isa 49:11; maslūl , Isa 35:8), to clear it of stones ( siqqēl , as in Isa 5:2; cf.
, Hos 9:12, shikkēl mē'âdâm ), and lift up a banner above the nations (one rising so high as to be visible far and wide), that the diaspora of all places may join those who are returning home with the friendly help of the nations (Isa 11:12; Isa 49:22). For Jehovah hath caused tidings to be heard to the end of the earth, i. e. , as we may see from what follows, the tidings of their liberation; in other words, looking at the historical fulfilment, the proclamation of Cyrus, which he caused to be issued throughout his empire at the instigation of Jehovah (Ezr 1:1).
Hitzig regards השׁמיע as expressing what had actually occurred at the time when the prophet uttered his predictions; and in reality the standpoint of the prophets was so far a variable one, that the fulfilment of what was predicted did draw nearer and nearer to it ἐν πνεύματι. But as hinnēh throughout the book of Isaiah, even when followed by a perfect, invariably points to something future, all that can be said is, that the divine announcement of the time of redemption, as having now arrived, stands out before the soul of the prophet with all the certainty of a historical fact.
The conclusion which Knobel draws from the expression “to the end of the earth,” as to the Babylonian standpoint of the prophet, is a false one. In his opinion, “the end of the earth” in such passages as Psa 72:8; Zec 9:10 ( 'aphsē - 'ârets ), and Isa 24:16 ( kenaph hâ'ârets ), signifies the western extremity of the orbis orientalis , that is to say, the region of the Mediterranean, more especially Palestine; whereas it was rather a term applied to the remotest lands which bounded the geographical horizon (compare Isa 42:10; Isa 48:20, with Psa 2:8; Psa 22:28, and other passages).
The words that follow (“Say ye,” etc.) might be taken as a command issued on the ground of the divine hishimiă‛ (“the Lord hath proclaimed”); but hishimiă‛ itself is a word that needs to be supplemented, so that what follows is the divine proclamation: Men everywhere, i. e. , as far as the earth or the dispersion of Israel extends, are to say to the daughter of Zion - that is to say, to the church which has its home in Zion, but is now in foreign lands - that “its salvation cometh,” i.
e. , that Jehovah, its Saviour, is coming to bestow a rich reward upon His church, which has passed through sever punishment, but has been so salutarily refined. Those to whom the words “Say ye,” etc. , are addressed, are not only the prophets of Israel, but all the mourners of Zion, who become mebhasserı̄m , just because they respond to this appeal (compare the meaning of this “Say ye to the daughter of Zion” with Zec 9:9 in Mat 21:5).
The whole of the next clause, “Behold, His reward,” etc. , is a repetition of the prophet’s own words in Isa 40:10. It is a question whether the words “and they shall call thee,” etc. , contain the gospel which is to be proclaimed according to the will of Jehovah to the end of the earth (see Isa 48:20), or whether they are a continuation of the prophecy which commences with “Behold, Jehovah hath proclaimed.
” The latter is the more probable, as the address here passes again into an objective promise. The realization of the gospel, which Jehovah causes to be preached, leads men to call those who are now still in exile “the holy people,” “the redeemed” (lit. ransomed, Isa 51:10; like pedūyē in Isa 35:10). “ And thee ” - thus does the prophecy close by returning to a direct address to Zion-Jerusalem - “thee will men call derūshâh ,” sought assiduously, i.
e. , one whose welfare men, and still more Jehovah, are zealously concerned to promote (compare the opposite in Jer 30:17) - “a city that will not be forsaken,” i. e. , in which men gladly settle, and which will never be without inhabitants again (the antithesis to ‛ăzūbhâh in Isa 60:15), possibly also in the sense that the gracious presence of God will never be withdrawn from it again (the antithesis to ‛ăzūbhâh in Isa 62:4).
נעזבה is the third pers. pr. , like nuchâmâh in Isa 54:11 : the perfect as expressing the abstract present (Ges. §126, 3). The following prophecy anticipates the question, how Israel can possibly rejoice in the recovered possession of its inheritance, if it is still to be surrounded by such malicious neighbours as the Edomites. Sixth Prophecy - Isa 63:1-6 Just as the Ammonites had been characterized by a thirst for extending their territory as well as by cruelty, and the Moabites by boasting and a slanderous disposition, so were the Edomites, although the brother-nation to Israel, characterised from time immemorial by fierce, implacable, bloodthirsty hatred towards Israel, upon which they fell in the most ruthless and malicious manner, whenever it was surrounded by danger or had suffered defeat.
The knavish way in which they acted in the time of Joram, when Jerusalem was surprised and plundered by Philistines and Arabians (2Ch 21:16-17), has been depicted by Obadiah. A large part of the inhabitants of Jerusalem were then taken prisoners, and sold by the conquerors, some to the Phoenicians and some to the Greeks (Oba 1:20; Joe 3:1-8); to the latter through the medium of the Edomites, who were in possession of the port and commercial city of Elath on the Elanitic Gulf (Amo 1:6).
Under the rule of the very same Joram the Edomites had made themselves independent of the house of David (2Ki 8:20; 2Ch 21:10), and a great massacre took place among the Judaeans settled in Idumaea; an act of wickedness for which Joel threatens them with the judgment of God (Joe 3:19), and which was regarded as not yet expiated even in the time of Uzziah, notwithstanding the fact that Amaziah had chastised them (2Ki 14:7), and Uzziah had wrested Elath from them (2Ki 14:22). “Thus saith Jehovah,” was the prophecy of Amos (Amo 1:11-12) in the first half of Uzziah’s reign, “for three transgressions of Edom, ad for four, I will not take it back, because he pursued his brother with the sword, and stifled his compassion, so that his anger tears in pieces for ever, and he keeps his fierce wrath eternally: And I let fire loose upon Teman, and it devours the palaces of Bozrah.
” So also at the destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans, and the carrying away of the people, Edom took the side of the Chaldeans, rejoiced over Israel’s defeat, and flattered itself that it should eventually rule over the territory that had hitherto belonged to Israel. They availed themselves of this opportunity to slake their thirst for revenge upon Israel, placing themselves at the service of its enemies, delivering up fugitive Judaeans or else massacring them, and really obtaining possession of the southern portion of Judaea, viz.
, Hebron (1 Macc. 5:65; cf. , Josephus, Wars of the Jews , iv 9, 7). With a retrospective glance at these, the latest manifestations of eternal enmity, Edom is threatened with divine vengeance by Jeremiah in the prophecy contained in Jer 49:7-22, which is taken for the most part from Obadiah; also in the Lamentations (Lam 4:21-22), as well as by Ezekiel (Eze 25:12-14, and especially Eze 35:1), and by the author of Psa 137:1-9, which looks back upon the time of the captivity.
Edom is not always an emblematical name for the imperial power of the world: this is evident enough from Psa 137:1-9, from Isaiah 21, and also from Isaiah 34 in connection with chapter 13, where the judgment upon Edom is represented as a different one from the judgment upon Babylon. Babylon and Edom are always to be taken literally, so far as the primary meaning of the prophecy is concerned; but they are also representative, Babylon standing for the violent and tyrannical world-power, and Edom for the world as cherishing hostility and manifesting hostility to Israel as Israel, i.
e. , as the people of God. Babylon had no other interest, so far as Israel was concerned, than to subjugate it like other kingdoms, and destroy every possibility of its ever rising again. But Edom, which dwelt in Israel’s immediate neighbourhood, and sprang from the same ancestral house, hated Israel with hereditary mortal hatred, although it knew the God of Israel better than Babylon ever did, because it knew that Israel had deprived it of its birthright, viz.
, the chieftainship. If Israel should have such a people as this, and such neighbouring nations generally round about it, after it had been delivered from the tyranny of the mistress of the world, its peace would still be incessantly threatened. Not only must Babylon fall, but Edom also must be trodden down, before Israel could be redeemed, or be regarded as perfectly redeemed.
The prophecy against Edom which follows here is therefore a well-chosen side-piece to the prophecy against Babel in Isa 47:1-15, at the point of time to which the prophet has been transported.
Isa 63:1 This is the smallest of all the twenty-seven prophecies. In its dramatic style it resembles Psa 24:1-10; in its visionary and emblematical character it resembles the tetralogy in Isaiah 21:1-22:14. The attention of the seer is attracted by a strange and lofty form coming from Edom, or more strictly from Bozrah; not the place in Auranitis or Hauran (Jer 48:24) which is memorable in church history, but the place in Edomitis or Gebal, between Petra and the Dead Sea, which still exists as a village in ruins under the diminutive name of el-Busaire .
“Who is this that cometh from Edom, in deep red clothes from Bozrah? This, glorious in his apparel, bending to and fro in the fulness of his strength? ” The verb châmats means to be sharp or bitter; but here, where it can only refer to colour, it means to be glaring, and as the Syriac shows, in which it is generally applied to blushing from shame or reverential awe, to be a staring red (ὀξέως).
The question, what is it that makes the clothes of this new-comer so strikingly red? is answered afterwards. But apart from the colour, they are splendid in their general arrangement and character. The person seen approaching is בּלבוּשׁו הדוּר (cf. , Arab. ḥdr and hdr , to rush up, to shoot up luxuriantly, ahdar used for a swollen body), and possibly through the medium of hâdâr (which may signify primarily a swelling, or pad, ὄγκος, and secondarily pomp or splendour), “to honour or adorn;” so that hâdūr signifies adorned, grand (as in Gen 24:65; Targ.
II lxx ὡραῖος), splendid. The verb tsâ‛âh , to bend or stoop, we have already met with in Isa 51:14. Here it is used to denote a gesture of proud self-consciousness, partly with or without the idea of the proud bending back of the head (or bending forward to listen), and partly with that of swaying to and fro, i. e. , the walk of a proud man swinging to and fro upon the hips.
The latter is the sense in which we understand tsō‛eh here, viz. , as a syn. of the Arabic mutamâli , to bend proudly from one side to the other (Vitringa: se huc illuc motitans ). The person seen here produces the impression of great and abundant strength; and his walk indicates the corresponding pride of self-consciousness. “Who is this? ” asks the seer of a third person.
But the answer comes from the person himself, though only seen in the distance, and therefore with a voice that could be heard afar off. “I am he that speaketh in righteousness, mighty to aid. ” Hitzig, Knobel, and others, take righteousness as the object of the speaking; and this is grammatically possible (בּ = περί, e. g. , Deu 6:7). But our prophet uses בצדק in Isa 42:6; Isa 45:13, and בצדקה in an adverbial sense: “strictly according to the rule of truth (more especially that of the counsel of mercy or plan of salvation) and right.
” The person approaching says that he is great in word and deed (Jer 32:19). He speaks in righteousness; in the zeal of his holiness threatening judgment to the oppressors, and promising salvation to the oppressed; and what he threatens and promises, he carries out with mighty power. He is great (רב, not רב; S. ὑπερμαχῶν, Jer. propugnator ) to aid the oppressed against their oppressors.
This alone might lead us to surmise, that it is God from whose mouth of righteousness (Isa 45:23) the consolation of redemption proceeds, and whose holy omnipotent arm (Isa 52:10; Isa 59:16) carries out the act of redemption.
Isa 63:2 The seer surmises this also, and now inquires still further, whence the strange red colour of his apparel, which does not look like the purple of a king’s talar or the scarlet of a chlamys. “Whence the red on thine apparel, and thy clothes like those of a wine-presser? ” מדּוּע inquires the reason and cause; למּה, in its primary sense, the object or purpose.
The seer asks, “Why is there red ( 'âdōm , neuter, like rabh in Isa 63:7) to thine apparel? ” The Lamed , which might be omitted (wherefore is thy garment red?) , implies that the red was not its original colour, but something added (cf. , Jer 30:12, and lâmō in Isa 26:16; Isa 53:8). This comes out still more distinctly in the second half of the question: “and (why are) thy clothes like those of one who treads (wine) in the wine-press” ( begath with a pausal á not lengthened, like baz in Isa 8:1), i.
e. , saturated and stained as if with the juice of purple grapes?
Isa 63:3-6 The person replies: “I have trodden the wine-trough alone, and of the nations no one was with me: and I trode them in my wrath, and trampled them down in my fury; and their life-sap spirted upon my clothes, and all my raiment was stained. For a day of vengeance was in my heart, and the year of my redemption was come. And I looked round, and there was no helper; and I wondered there was no supporter: then mine own arm helped me; and my fury, it became my support.
And I trode down nations in my wrath, and made them drunk in my fury, and made their life-blood run down to the earth. ” He had indeed trodden the wine-press ( pūrâh = gath , or, if distinct from this, the pressing-trough as distinguished from the pressing-house or pressing-place; according to Fürst, something hollowed out; but according to the traditional interpretation from pūr = pârar , to crush, press, both different from yeqebh : see at Isa 5:2), and he alone; so that the juice of the grapes had saturated and coloured his clothes, and his only.
When he adds, that of the nations no one was with him, it follows that the press which he trode was so great, that he might have needed the assistance of whole nations. And when he continues thus: And I trod them in my wrath, etc. , the enigma is at once explained. It was to the nations themselves that the knife was applied. They were cut off like grapes and put into the wine-press (Joe 3:13); and this heroic figure, of which there was no longer any doubt that it was Jehovah Himself, had trodden them down in the impulse and strength of His wrath.
The red upon the clothes was the life-blood of the nations, which had spirted upon them, and with which, as He trode this wine-press, He had soiled all His garments. Nētsach , according to the more recently accepted derivation from nâtsach , signifies, according to the traditional idea, which is favoured by Lam 3:18, vigor , the vital strength and life-blood, regarded as the sap of life.
ויז (compare the historical tense ויּז in 2Ki 9:33) is the future used as an imperfect, and it spirted, from nâzâh (see at Isa 52:15). אגאלתּי (from גּאל = גּעל, Isa 59:3) is the perfect hiphil with an Aramaean inflexion (compare the same Aramaism in Psa 76:6; 2Ch 20:35; and הלאני, which is half like it, in Job 16:7); the Hebrew form would be הגאלתּי. AE and A regard the form as a mixture of the perfect and future, but this is a mistake.
This work of wrath had been executed by Jehovah, because He had in His heart a day of vengeance, which could not be delayed, and because the year (see at Isa 61:2) of His promised redemption had arrived. גּאּלי (this is the proper reading, not גּאוּלי, as some codd. have it; and this was the reading which Rashi had before him in his comm. on Lam 1:6) is the plural of the passive participle used as an abstract noun (compare היּים vivi , vitales , or rather viva , vitalia = vita ).
And He only had accomplished this work of wrath. Isa 63:5 is the expansion of לבדּי, and almost a verbal repetition of Isa 59:16. The meaning is, that no one joined Him with conscious free-will, to render help to the God of judgment and salvation in His purposes. The church that was devoted to Him was itself the object of the redemption, and the great mass of those who were estranged from Him the object of the judgment.
Thus He found Himself alone, neither human co-operation nor the natural course of events helping the accomplishment of His purposes. And consequently He renounced all human help, and broke through the steady course of development by a marvellous act of His own. He trode down nations in His wrath, and intoxicated them in His fury, and caused their life-blood to flow down to the ground.
The Targum adopts the rendering “ et triturabo eos ,” as if the reading were ואשׁבּרם, which we find in Sonc. 1488, and certain other editions, as well as in some codd. Many agree with Cappellus in preferring this reading; and in itself it is not inadmissible (see Lam 1:15). But the lxx and all the other ancient versions, the Masora (which distinguishes ואשׁכרם with כ, as only met with once, from ואשׁברם morf , with ב in Deu 9:17), and the great majority of the MSS, support the traditional reading.
There is nothing surprising in the transition to the figure of the cup of wrath, which is a very common one with Isaiah. Moreover, all that is intended is, that Jehovah caused the nations to feel the full force of this His fury, by trampling them down in His fury. Even in this short ad highly poetical passage we see a desire to emblematize, just as in the emblematic cycle of prophetical night-visions in Isaiah 21:1-22:14.
For not only is the name of Edom made covertly into an emblem of its future fate, אדם becoming אדם upon the apparel of Jehovah the avenger, when the blood of the people, stained with blood-guiltiness towards the people of God, is spirted out, but the name of Bozrah also; for bâtsar means to cut off bunches of grapes ( vindemiare ), and botsrâh becomes bâtsı̄r , i. e.
, a vintage, which Jehovah treads in His wrath, when He punishes the Edomitish nation as well as all the rest of the nations, which in their hostility towards Him and His people have taken pleasure in the carrying away of Israel and the destruction of Jerusalem, and have lent their assistance in accomplishing them. Knobel supposes that the judgment referred to is the defeat which Cyrus inflicted upon the nations under Croesus and their allies; but it can neither be shown that this defeat affected the Edomites, nor can we understand why Jehovah should appear as if coming from Edom-Bozrah, after inflicting this judgment, to which Isa 41:2.
refers. Knobel himself also observes, that Edom was still an independent kingdom, and hostile to the Persians (Diod. xv 2) not only under the reign of Cambyses (Herod. iii. 5ff.) , but even later than that (Diod. xiii. 46). But at the time of Malachi, who lived under Artaxerxes Longimanus, if not under his successor Darius Nothus, a judgment of devastation was inflicted upon Edom (Mal 1:3-5), from which it never recovered.
The Chaldeans, as Caspari has shown ( Obad . p. 142), cannot have executed it, since the Edomites appear throughout as their accomplices, and as still maintaining their independence even under the first Persian kings; nor can any historical support be found to the conjecture, that it occurred in the wars between the Persians and the Egyptians (Hitzig and Köhler, Mal .
p. 35). What the prophet’s eye really saw was fulfilled in the time of the Maccabaeans, when Judas inflicted a total defeat upon them, John Hyrcanus compelled them to become Jews, and Alexander Jannai completed their subjection; and in the time of the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, when Simon of Gerasa avenged their cruel conduct in Jerusalem in combination with the Zelots, by ruthlessly turning their well-cultivated land into a horrible desert, just as it would have been left by a swarm of locusts (Jos.
Wars of the Jews , iv 9, 7). The New Testament counterpart of this passage in Isaiah is the destruction of Antichrist and his army (Rev 19:11.) He who effects this destruction is called the Faithful and True, the Logos of God; and the seer beholds Him sitting upon a white horse, with eyes of flaming fire, and many diadems upon His head, wearing a blood-stained garment, like the person seen by the prophet here.
The vision of John is evidently formed upon the basis of that of Isaiah; for when it is said of the Logos that He rules the nations with a staff of iron, this points to Psa 2:1-12; and when it is still further said that He treads the wine-press of the wrath of Almighty God, this points back to Isaiah 63. The reference throughout is not to the first coming of the Lord, when He laid the foundation of His kingdom by suffering and dying, but to His final coming, when He will bring His regal sway to a victorious issue.
Nevertheless Isa 63:1-6 has always been a favourite passage for reading in Passion week. It is no doubt true that the Christian cannot read this prophecy without thinking of the Saviour streaming with blood, who trode the wine-press of wrath for us without the help of angels and men, i. e. , who conquered wrath for us. But the prophecy does not relate to this.
The blood upon the garment of the divine Hero is not His own, but that of His enemies; and His treading of the wine-press is not the conquest of wrath, but the manifestation of wrath. This section can only be properly used as a lesson for Passion week so far as this, that Jehovah, who here appears to the Old Testament seer, was certainly He who became man in His Christ, in the historical fulfilment of His purposes; and behind the first advent to bring salvation there stood with warning form the final coming to judgment, which will take vengeance upon that Edom, to whom the red lentil-judgment of worldly lust and power was dearer than the red life-blood of that loving Servant of Jehovah who offered Himself for the sin of the whole world.
There follows now in Isaiah 63:7-64:11 a prayer commencing with the thanksgiving as it looks back to the past, and closing with a prayer for help as it turns to the present. Hitzig and Knobel connect this closely with Isa 63:1-6, assuming that through the great event which had occurred, viz. , the overthrow of Edom, and of the nations hostile to the people of God as such, by which the exiles were brought one step nearer to freedom, the prophet was led to praise Jehovah for all His previous goodness to Israel.
There is nothing, however, to indicate this connection, which is in itself a very loose one. The prayer which follows is chiefly an entreaty, and an entreaty appended to Isa 63:1-6, but without any retrospective allusion to it: it is rather a prayer in general for the realization of the redemption already promised. Ewald is right in regarding Isaiah 63:7-66:24 as an appendix to this whole book of consolation, since the traces of the same prophet are unmistakeable; but the whole style of the description is obviously different, and the historical circumstances must have been still further developed in the meantime.
The three prophecies which follow are the finale of the whole. The announcement of the prophet, which has reached its highest point in the majestic vision in Isa 63:1-6, is now drawing to an end. It is standing close upon the threshold of all that has been promised, and nothing remains but the fulfilment of the promise, which he has held up like a jewel on every side.
And now, just as in the finale of a poetical composition, all the melodies and movements that have been struck before are gathered up into one effective close; and first of all, as in Hab, into a prayer, which forms, as it were, the lyrical echo of the preaching that has gone before.
Isa 63:3-6 The person replies: “I have trodden the wine-trough alone, and of the nations no one was with me: and I trode them in my wrath, and trampled them down in my fury; and their life-sap spirted upon my clothes, and all my raiment was stained. For a day of vengeance was in my heart, and the year of my redemption was come. And I looked round, and there was no helper; and I wondered there was no supporter: then mine own arm helped me; and my fury, it became my support.
And I trode down nations in my wrath, and made them drunk in my fury, and made their life-blood run down to the earth. ” He had indeed trodden the wine-press ( pūrâh = gath , or, if distinct from this, the pressing-trough as distinguished from the pressing-house or pressing-place; according to Fürst, something hollowed out; but according to the traditional interpretation from pūr = pârar , to crush, press, both different from yeqebh : see at Isa 5:2), and he alone; so that the juice of the grapes had saturated and coloured his clothes, and his only.
When he adds, that of the nations no one was with him, it follows that the press which he trode was so great, that he might have needed the assistance of whole nations. And when he continues thus: And I trod them in my wrath, etc. , the enigma is at once explained. It was to the nations themselves that the knife was applied. They were cut off like grapes and put into the wine-press (Joe 3:13); and this heroic figure, of which there was no longer any doubt that it was Jehovah Himself, had trodden them down in the impulse and strength of His wrath.
The red upon the clothes was the life-blood of the nations, which had spirted upon them, and with which, as He trode this wine-press, He had soiled all His garments. Nētsach , according to the more recently accepted derivation from nâtsach , signifies, according to the traditional idea, which is favoured by Lam 3:18, vigor , the vital strength and life-blood, regarded as the sap of life.
ויז (compare the historical tense ויּז in 2Ki 9:33) is the future used as an imperfect, and it spirted, from nâzâh (see at Isa 52:15). אגאלתּי (from גּאל = גּעל, Isa 59:3) is the perfect hiphil with an Aramaean inflexion (compare the same Aramaism in Psa 76:6; 2Ch 20:35; and הלאני, which is half like it, in Job 16:7); the Hebrew form would be הגאלתּי. AE and A regard the form as a mixture of the perfect and future, but this is a mistake.
This work of wrath had been executed by Jehovah, because He had in His heart a day of vengeance, which could not be delayed, and because the year (see at Isa 61:2) of His promised redemption had arrived. גּאּלי (this is the proper reading, not גּאוּלי, as some codd. have it; and this was the reading which Rashi had before him in his comm. on Lam 1:6) is the plural of the passive participle used as an abstract noun (compare היּים vivi , vitales , or rather viva , vitalia = vita ).
And He only had accomplished this work of wrath. Isa 63:5 is the expansion of לבדּי, and almost a verbal repetition of Isa 59:16. The meaning is, that no one joined Him with conscious free-will, to render help to the God of judgment and salvation in His purposes. The church that was devoted to Him was itself the object of the redemption, and the great mass of those who were estranged from Him the object of the judgment.
Thus He found Himself alone, neither human co-operation nor the natural course of events helping the accomplishment of His purposes. And consequently He renounced all human help, and broke through the steady course of development by a marvellous act of His own. He trode down nations in His wrath, and intoxicated them in His fury, and caused their life-blood to flow down to the ground.
The Targum adopts the rendering “ et triturabo eos ,” as if the reading were ואשׁבּרם, which we find in Sonc. 1488, and certain other editions, as well as in some codd. Many agree with Cappellus in preferring this reading; and in itself it is not inadmissible (see Lam 1:15). But the lxx and all the other ancient versions, the Masora (which distinguishes ואשׁכרם with כ, as only met with once, from ואשׁברם morf , with ב in Deu 9:17), and the great majority of the MSS, support the traditional reading.
There is nothing surprising in the transition to the figure of the cup of wrath, which is a very common one with Isaiah. Moreover, all that is intended is, that Jehovah caused the nations to feel the full force of this His fury, by trampling them down in His fury. Even in this short ad highly poetical passage we see a desire to emblematize, just as in the emblematic cycle of prophetical night-visions in Isaiah 21:1-22:14.
For not only is the name of Edom made covertly into an emblem of its future fate, אדם becoming אדם upon the apparel of Jehovah the avenger, when the blood of the people, stained with blood-guiltiness towards the people of God, is spirted out, but the name of Bozrah also; for bâtsar means to cut off bunches of grapes ( vindemiare ), and botsrâh becomes bâtsı̄r , i. e.
, a vintage, which Jehovah treads in His wrath, when He punishes the Edomitish nation as well as all the rest of the nations, which in their hostility towards Him and His people have taken pleasure in the carrying away of Israel and the destruction of Jerusalem, and have lent their assistance in accomplishing them. Knobel supposes that the judgment referred to is the defeat which Cyrus inflicted upon the nations under Croesus and their allies; but it can neither be shown that this defeat affected the Edomites, nor can we understand why Jehovah should appear as if coming from Edom-Bozrah, after inflicting this judgment, to which Isa 41:2.
refers. Knobel himself also observes, that Edom was still an independent kingdom, and hostile to the Persians (Diod. xv 2) not only under the reign of Cambyses (Herod. iii. 5ff.) , but even later than that (Diod. xiii. 46). But at the time of Malachi, who lived under Artaxerxes Longimanus, if not under his successor Darius Nothus, a judgment of devastation was inflicted upon Edom (Mal 1:3-5), from which it never recovered.
The Chaldeans, as Caspari has shown ( Obad . p. 142), cannot have executed it, since the Edomites appear throughout as their accomplices, and as still maintaining their independence even under the first Persian kings; nor can any historical support be found to the conjecture, that it occurred in the wars between the Persians and the Egyptians (Hitzig and Köhler, Mal .
p. 35). What the prophet’s eye really saw was fulfilled in the time of the Maccabaeans, when Judas inflicted a total defeat upon them, John Hyrcanus compelled them to become Jews, and Alexander Jannai completed their subjection; and in the time of the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, when Simon of Gerasa avenged their cruel conduct in Jerusalem in combination with the Zelots, by ruthlessly turning their well-cultivated land into a horrible desert, just as it would have been left by a swarm of locusts (Jos.
Wars of the Jews , iv 9, 7). The New Testament counterpart of this passage in Isaiah is the destruction of Antichrist and his army (Rev 19:11.) He who effects this destruction is called the Faithful and True, the Logos of God; and the seer beholds Him sitting upon a white horse, with eyes of flaming fire, and many diadems upon His head, wearing a blood-stained garment, like the person seen by the prophet here.
The vision of John is evidently formed upon the basis of that of Isaiah; for when it is said of the Logos that He rules the nations with a staff of iron, this points to Psa 2:1-12; and when it is still further said that He treads the wine-press of the wrath of Almighty God, this points back to Isaiah 63. The reference throughout is not to the first coming of the Lord, when He laid the foundation of His kingdom by suffering and dying, but to His final coming, when He will bring His regal sway to a victorious issue.
Nevertheless Isa 63:1-6 has always been a favourite passage for reading in Passion week. It is no doubt true that the Christian cannot read this prophecy without thinking of the Saviour streaming with blood, who trode the wine-press of wrath for us without the help of angels and men, i. e. , who conquered wrath for us. But the prophecy does not relate to this.
The blood upon the garment of the divine Hero is not His own, but that of His enemies; and His treading of the wine-press is not the conquest of wrath, but the manifestation of wrath. This section can only be properly used as a lesson for Passion week so far as this, that Jehovah, who here appears to the Old Testament seer, was certainly He who became man in His Christ, in the historical fulfilment of His purposes; and behind the first advent to bring salvation there stood with warning form the final coming to judgment, which will take vengeance upon that Edom, to whom the red lentil-judgment of worldly lust and power was dearer than the red life-blood of that loving Servant of Jehovah who offered Himself for the sin of the whole world.
There follows now in Isaiah 63:7-64:11 a prayer commencing with the thanksgiving as it looks back to the past, and closing with a prayer for help as it turns to the present. Hitzig and Knobel connect this closely with Isa 63:1-6, assuming that through the great event which had occurred, viz. , the overthrow of Edom, and of the nations hostile to the people of God as such, by which the exiles were brought one step nearer to freedom, the prophet was led to praise Jehovah for all His previous goodness to Israel.
There is nothing, however, to indicate this connection, which is in itself a very loose one. The prayer which follows is chiefly an entreaty, and an entreaty appended to Isa 63:1-6, but without any retrospective allusion to it: it is rather a prayer in general for the realization of the redemption already promised. Ewald is right in regarding Isaiah 63:7-66:24 as an appendix to this whole book of consolation, since the traces of the same prophet are unmistakeable; but the whole style of the description is obviously different, and the historical circumstances must have been still further developed in the meantime.
The three prophecies which follow are the finale of the whole. The announcement of the prophet, which has reached its highest point in the majestic vision in Isa 63:1-6, is now drawing to an end. It is standing close upon the threshold of all that has been promised, and nothing remains but the fulfilment of the promise, which he has held up like a jewel on every side.
And now, just as in the finale of a poetical composition, all the melodies and movements that have been struck before are gathered up into one effective close; and first of all, as in Hab, into a prayer, which forms, as it were, the lyrical echo of the preaching that has gone before.