Prepare to Teach

Isaiah 66:15-24

Final judgment reveals God’s glory and secures everlasting worship.

Scripture Text

66:15 For, behold, Yahweh will come with fire, and His chariots will be like the whirlwind; to render His anger with fierceness, and His rebuke with flames of fire.

66:16 For Yahweh will execute judgment by fire and by His sword on all flesh; and those slain by Yahweh will be many.

66:17 “Those who sanctify themselves and purify themselves to go to the gardens, behind one in the middle, eating pig’s meat, abominable things, and the mouse, they shall come to an end together,” says Yahweh.

66:18 “For I know their works and their thoughts. The time comes that I will gather all nations and languages, and they will come, and will see my glory.

66:19 “I will set a sign among them, and I will send those who escape of them to the nations, to Tarshish, Pul, and Lud, who draw the bow, to Tubal and Javan, to far-away islands, who have not heard my fame, nor have seen my glory; and they shall declare my glory among the nations.

66:20 They shall bring all Your brothers out of all the nations for an offering to Yahweh, on horses, in chariots, in litters, on mules, and on camels, to my holy mountain Jerusalem, says Yahweh, as the children of Israel bring their offering in a clean vessel into Yahweh’s house.

66:21 Of them I will also select priests and Levites,” says Yahweh.

66:22 “For as the new heavens and the new earth, which I will make, shall remain before me,” says Yahweh, “so Your offspring and Your name shall remain.

66:23 It shall happen that from one new moon to another, and from one Sabbath to another, all flesh will come to worship before me,” says Yahweh.

66:24 “They will go out, and look at the dead bodies of the men who have transgressed against me; for their worm will not die, nor will their fire be quenched, and they will be loathsome to all mankind.”

Anchor

Final judgment reveals God’s glory and secures everlasting worship.

The Lord comes in fire to judge all flesh, gathering the nations to witness His glory, preserving a worshiping people, and displaying the enduring consequences of rebellion.

Point of Contact

Isaiah ends by asking whether we tremble. The final issue is not whether we possess religious structures, but whether the Word of the Lord possesses us.

Rhythm
  1. 66:1–2 The Lord’s transcendence relativizes temple-building and centers worship on humility, contrition, and trembling at His word.
  2. 66:3–4 Ritual acts without obedient trembling become abomination, and the Lord repays refusal.
  3. 66:5–6 Those hated for the Lord’s name will see their persecutors put to shame.
  4. 66:7–9 The Lord miraculously brings Zion to birth, creating sudden restoration.
  5. 66:10–14 Those who mourned over Jerusalem rejoice, nurse, are comforted, and flourish under the Lord’s hand.
  6. 66:14–17 The Lord’s fury falls on foes, and fire, sword, and final end come upon corrupt worshipers.
  7. 66:18–19 All nations and tongues are gathered to see glory, and survivors are sent to proclaim glory among distant nations.
  8. 66:20–21 The nations bring the scattered people as a clean offering, and the Lord takes some for priests and Levites.
  9. 66:22–23 The new heavens and new earth endure, and all humanity worships before the Lord.
  10. The book ends with the sobering, unquenched judgment of rebels.
Crucial Turning Point

From the Lord’s declaration that heaven is His throne and earth His footstool, to His favor toward the humble and contrite who tremble at His word, to condemnation of self-chosen worship, to comfort for those hated for the Lord’s name, to Zion’s miraculous birth and Jerusalem’s maternal comfort, to the Lord’s fiery judgment, to the gathering of nations and return of scattered worshipers, to priestly inclusion, to enduring new creation worship, and finally to the horrifying end of rebels.

Isaiah 66 argues that the Lord’s final concern is not possession of religious forms but humble submission to His word. Because He is the Creator whose throne is heaven and whose footstool is earth, He cannot be manipulated by temple, sacrifice, or ritual. He receives the humble and contrite who tremble at His word and rejects those who choose their own ways. The Lord will comfort Zion, judge rebels, gather the nations, establish priestly worship, and bring His people into enduring new creation, while the judgment of rebels remains forever sobering.

Theological logic
  1. The LORD is transcendent Creator and cannot be contained by human houses.
  2. True worship is marked by humility, contrition, and trembling before the LORD’s word.
  3. Ritual without submission becomes abomination.
  4. Refusing the LORD’s call brings reciprocal judgment.
  5. The LORD vindicates those hated for his name.
  6. Zion’s restoration is miraculous divine birth.
  7. The LORD completes what he brings to birth.
  8. Jerusalem becomes the place of comfort and abundant peace.
  9. Comfort for servants is paired with fury against foes.
  10. The LORD’s final coming includes fiery judgment.
  11. The LORD gathers nations and tongues to see his glory.
  12. The nations become involved in bringing worshipers to the LORD.
  13. The LORD broadens priestly service according to his own sovereign choice.
  14. New creation gives enduring permanence to God’s people and worship.
  15. Final worship does not erase final judgment.
Watch Out
  • Do not minimize the severity of final judgment imagery.
  • Avoid separating global mission from divine holiness.
  • Do not collapse new creation into mere symbolic language.
  • Resist speculative detail beyond prophetic description.
  • Do not detach worship from covenant allegiance.
Invitation Arc
  • The certainty of judgment calls for repentance and faithful living.
  • God’s glory will be revealed to all, calling believers to worship and witness now.
  • The mission to the nations reflects God’s global redemptive purpose.
  • Hope in eternal worship strengthens perseverance in present trials.
Response
  • Creator humility - Begin prayer and worship by remembering that heaven is the Lord’s throne and earth His footstool.
  • Contrite confession - Regularly confess sin with lowliness rather than religious defensiveness.
  • Word-trembling - Read Scripture with reverence, submission, repentance, and readiness to obey.
  • Worship audit - Ask whether worship practices are governed by God’s Word or by self-chosen preferences.
  • Faithful endurance - Remain faithful when obedience to the Word brings misunderstanding or exclusion.
  • Comfort reception - Receive the Lord’s comfort deeply without losing reverence for His holiness.
  • Missionary proclamation - Speak of the Lord’s glory among people who have not truly heard.
  • Priestly service - Practice prayer, holiness, worship, intercession, and witness as daily priestly service.
  • New creation hope - Let the endurance of the new heavens and new earth strengthen present obedience.
  • Sober warning - Do not hide Scripture’s warnings about judgment. Speak them with tears and truth.
Canonical Thread
  • Chapter Summary : The Lord, whose throne is heaven and whose footstool is earth, rejects self-directed religion, looks with favor on the humble who tremble at His word, comforts Zion, gathers the nations to see His glory, establishes enduring new creation worship, and judges rebels with final severity.
Gospel Clarity

Isaiah 66:15-24 reveals final judgment and universal worship under the Lord’s glory. The gospel proclaims that through Christ people from every nation are gathered into worship while warning of the reality of final judgment.