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Isaiah 57

1

The righteous perisheth, and no man layeth it to heart: and merciful men are taken away, none considering that the righteous is taken away from the evil to come.

2

He shall enter into peace: they shall rest in their beds, each one walking in his uprightness.

1
3

But draw near hither, ye sons of the sorceress, the seed of the adulterer and the whore.

4

Against whom do ye sport yourselves? against whom make ye a wide mouth, and draw out the tongue? are ye not children of transgression, a seed of falsehood,

5

Enflaming yourselves with idols under every green tree, slaying the children in the valleys under the clifts of the rocks?

6

Among the smooth stones of the stream is thy portion; they, they are thy lot: even to them hast thou poured a drink offering, thou hast offered a meat offering. Should I receive comfort in these?

7

Upon a lofty and high mountain hast thou set thy bed: even thither wentest thou up to offer sacrifice.

8

Behind the doors also and the posts hast thou set up thy remembrance: for thou hast discovered thyself to another than me, and art gone up; thou hast enlarged thy bed, and made thee a covenant with them; thou lovedst their bed where thou sawest it.

9

And thou wentest to the king with ointment, and didst increase thy perfumes, and didst send thy messengers far off, and didst debase thyself even unto hell.

10

Thou art wearied in the greatness of thy way; yet saidst thou not, There is no hope: thou hast found the life of thine hand; therefore thou wast not grieved.

11

And of whom hast thou been afraid or feared, that thou hast lied, and hast not remembered me, nor laid it to thy heart? have not I held my peace even of old, and thou fearest me not?

12

I will declare thy righteousness, and thy works; for they shall not profit thee.

1
13

When thou criest, let thy companies deliver thee; but the wind shall carry them all away; vanity shall take them: but he that putteth his trust in me shall possess the land, and shall inherit my holy mountain;

14

And shall say, Cast ye up, cast ye up, prepare the way, take up the stumblingblock out of the way of my people.

15

For thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy; I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones.

16

For I will not contend for ever, neither will I be always wroth: for the spirit should fail before me, and the souls which I have made.

17

For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth, and smote him: I hid me, and was wroth, and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart.

18

I have seen his ways, and will heal him: I will lead him also, and restore comforts unto him and to his mourners.

19

I create the fruit of the lips; Peace, peace to him that is far off, and to him that is near, saith the Lord; and I will heal him.

20

But the wicked are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt.

21

There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked.

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Isaiah 57

The passage announces the passing of the righteous into peace but pronounces judgment against the wicked whose consciences are troubled like the sea. The oracle criticizes idolatry and the worship of false gods, particularly fertility cults and the worship in high places. The passage includes harsh critique of those who have burned with lust and who have defiled themselves through idolatrous practices. Yet the oracle shifts to a vision of restoration where the Lord will revive the spirit of the contrite and humble, establishing that repentance opens the way for healing and restoration. The passage promises that the Lord will lead the righteous in paths of justice and will heal their brokenness, establishing divine compassion for the wounded. The vision includes the promise that the wicked will find no peace, but that the Lord will create fruit of the lips for those who call on His name. Isaiah 57 demonstrates that idolatry and injustice produce spiritual emptiness and turmoil, while faithfulness to God produces peace and restoration. The chapter establishes that even amid judgment and criticism, hope remains available for those who turn from idolatry and embrace covenant faithfulness.

Isaiah 57:1

Verse 1 mourns the death of the righteous without apparent recognition or lamentation, suggesting a social crisis where virtue goes unrecognized and the just die in obscurity. The image of the righteous being gathered to peace amidst chaos offers comfort: divine judgment is not temporal but eschatological, and death for the righteous is deliverance rather than abandonment. This verse addresses existential despair in the post-exilic community, validating suffering and loss while asserting that God's justice operates beyond visible history. The theological move—from lament to latent consolation—models how Trito-Isaiah processes communal trauma.

Isaiah 57:2

The promise that the righteous "enter into peace" and "find rest upon their beds" contrasts sharply with the sleeplessness and anxiety of the corrupt (56:10-11), establishing moral differentiation in the afterlife or in God's providential care. Rest becomes the eschatological reward for the faithful, echoing Sabbath theology and the Land-rest motif. The phrase "rest upon their beds" suggests domestic peace and security, not merely mystical union; consolation is embodied and relational. For an exilic community experiencing displacement and instability, this promise of bedside peace addresses the deepest yearning for home and safety.

Isaiah 57:3

The prophetic accusation suddenly pivots to condemn idolatry and illegitimate sexuality, addressing those "born of a sorceress...children of an adulteress and prostitute." The metaphorical language suggests not literal genealogy but spiritual corruption: religious infidelity is figured as sexual transgression, a rhetorical strategy linking covenant breach to bodily violation. The specific mention of sorcery and prostitution indicates syncretistic religious practices or foreign cultic adoption. This verse reflects post-exilic anxiety about boundary-maintenance and the danger of assimilation into gentile religious practices, framing idolatry as family shame.

Isaiah 57:4

The verse continues to shame idolaters as those who "laugh openly" and "make your mouths wide," mocking the covenant or displaying contempt for YHWH. The physical descriptions—laughter, extended mouths, tongue extended—render religious infidelity as bodily mockery and impropriety. The rhetorical question "Are you not children of transgression, offspring of deception?" intensifies shame by questioning the very legitimacy of their Israelite identity. This escalation uses genealogical language (turned against idolaters) to strip them of covenantal status, preparing for their expulsion or exclusion from the restored community.

Isaiah 57:5

The specific mention of children sacrificed in valleys and in clefts of rocks indicts practitioners of child sacrifice, likely referencing Molech worship or syncretistic Canaanite practices. The graphic nature of the indictment—explicit naming of cultic site and victim—aims to provoke revulsion and moral clarity among the community. This verse reflects actual post-exilic religious controversies where minority groups may have maintained pre-exilic or foreign cultic practices. The prophetic condemnation establishes that full inclusion in the restored community requires categorical rejection of non-YHWISTIC religious practice, particularly those involving human sacrifice.

Isaiah 57:6

Verse 6 continues the critique of idolatrous ritual, describing the smooth stones of valley streams as the idolater's portion and destiny—a mockery of the divine inheritance promised to the faithful. The pouring of drink offerings to such stones and the giving of grain offerings to idols constitutes covenant violation and rebellion against the sole sovereignty of YHWH. The rhetorical question "Is your portion in these?" sarcastically implies that choosing dead objects over the living God guarantees emptiness. This verse's mockery aims to delegitimize competing cultic claims and reinforce covenantal exclusivity.

Isaiah 57:7

The elevation of idolatrous altars "on every high mountain" and their preparation upon hills reflects actual topographic religious practice in Second Temple Judaism and surrounding communities. The prophet's mention of such places suggests they were visible, organized, and normalized—a community practice rather than fringe behavior. The clause "there you went up to offer sacrifice" implicates not marginal figures but a community segment with cultic infrastructure. This evidence of organized, sustained idolatry frames the prophetic crisis: Trito-Isaiah must delegitimize and eradicate competitive religious systems to restore YHWH-exclusive monotheism.

Isaiah 57:8

The concealment of idolatrous symbols "behind your doors and doorposts" and the revelation of intimacy to strangers conflate religious infidelity with sexual transgression and private shame. The language suggests deliberate concealment paired with paradoxical exposure—a theological contradiction capturing the moral incoherence of syncretism. The phrase "you exposed yourself to strangers" implicates not innocent error but willful covenant violation, trading exclusive covenant relationship for foreign alliances. This verse's rhetorical strategy makes idolatry obscene and shameful, inverting the proud idolater's self-assessment.

Isaiah 57:9

Verse 9 describes the idolater's journey to the king with oil and perfumes, possibly alluding to diplomatic missions or cultic pilgrimages to foreign courts or shrines. The emissaries being sent "far away" suggests commerce and covenant with distant nations, politically destabilizing as well as religiously illegitimate. The language captures the anxiety of post-exilic politics: vulnerable communities faced pressure to engage in syncretistic diplomacy or adopt foreign gods for political security. The prophet's critique implicates not merely personal idolatry but collective political weakness rooted in religious infidelity.

Isaiah 57:10

The prophet's accusation that idolaters are "wearied by the length of your road" suggests the exhausting futility of pursuing false gods and foreign alliances. The rhetorical question "Yet you did not say, 'I give up'" indicates stubborn persistence in covenant violation despite its obvious fruitlessness. The psychological insight—that idolaters maintain false hope despite futility—captures the self-deception inherent in idolatry. This verse invites reflection on why communities or individuals persist in practices that demonstrably fail to deliver promised benefits, suggesting spiritual blindness or demonic compulsion.

Isaiah 57:11

The accusation "Whom have you so dreaded and feared that you have been false, and have not remembered me?" pivots from judgment to appeal, suggesting that idolatry stems from misplaced fear and amnesia regarding YHWH's covenantal faithfulness. The prophet implies that idolatry is not reasoned choice but fear-driven survival strategy, seeking security through foreign gods and alliances. The charge of forgetting YHWH reframes idolatry as betrayal rooted in anxiety and spiritual amnesia. This psychological diagnosis opens space for repentance: if fear drives idolatry, then restored confidence in YHWH's power could reverse it.

Isaiah 57:12

The verse declares that the prophet will expose the idolaters' works and their righteousness (sarcastically implying their supposed "righteousness"), which will not profit them. The prophetic threat to expose rather than conceal inverts the idolaters' strategy of hidden practice and public respectability. The claim that their self-proclaimed righteousness will not profit them asserts that YHWH's judgment supersedes their own self-assessment. This verse establishes prophetic authority to dismantle false claims to righteousness and expose moral incoherence between profession and practice.

Isaiah 57:13

When the desperate idolaters cry out, verse 13 promises that their collected false gods will not deliver them—a direct negation of idolatrous confidence. The counterassertion that "those who take refuge in me will inherit the land and possess my holy mountain" restores the covenantal promise and eschatological inheritance to YHWH alone. The contrast between the impotence of idols and the efficacy of covenantal trust becomes stark and absolute. This verse reassures the faithful remnant that covenant loyalty guarantees ultimate vindication and possession of the promised inheritance.

Isaiah 57:14

The transition in verse 14 from judgment to consolation commands the preparation of a highway for the people's return: "Build it up, build it up, prepare the way, remove every obstacle from my people's way." The repetition and imperative mood create urgency and divine agency disguised as command. The highway image echoes Isaiah 40's return-journey motif but relocates it to interior restoration, suggesting that physical return alone is insufficient without spiritual cleansing. This verse signals the prophetic movement toward consolation after addressing the community's internal idolatrous corruption.

Isaiah 57:15

The high and exalted God who dwells in eternal holiness paradoxically inhabits "a contrite and lowly spirit," reversing expectations about divine transcendence and presence. This verse establishes that the prerequisite for encountering the utterly transcendent God is spiritual humility and brokenness, not ritual purity or political power. The promise that God will "revive the spirit of the lowly and renew the heart of the contrite" extends healing to those spiritually broken by exile or idolatry, offering restoration rather than perpetual judgment. This democratization of access to God—through contrition rather than status—redefines what it means to encounter the holy.

Isaiah 57:16

The verse asserts that God will not contend forever or be eternally angry, emphasizing divine merciful restraint despite repeated covenant violation: "the human spirit would overwhelm without the breath I give." The suggestion that human spirits would expire without God's sustaining breath reframes divine forbearance as necessary for continuing existence itself. The theological claim that God does not maintain eternal wrath implies that covenant dissolution is not final; restoration remains possible through repentance and renewed covenant commitment. This verse offers pastoral comfort to a community scarred by exile and judgment.

Isaiah 57:17

Verse 17 explains that God's wrath against human greed and idolatry led to God's hiddenness ("I hid my face and was angry"), suggesting that abandonment was divinely orchestrated punishment for covenant breach. The connection between idolatrous heart-turning and YHWH's withdrawal establishes causal relationship: covenant violation necessitates divine absence. Yet the historical persistence of Israel despite exile—the fact that the exiles returned and maintained covenant identity—suggests that hiddenness was not absolute or final. This verse frames the exilic period as divine discipline aimed at covenant restoration rather than permanent rejection.

Isaiah 57:18

God's promise to heal the repentant—"I have seen their ways, but I will heal them; I will guide them"—reverses the trajectory of judgment and restores active divine care. The shift from anger to healing, from hiddenness to guidance, represents YHWH's merciful reversal contingent upon the people's recognition of their waywardness. The promise encompasses both physical restoration (healing) and relational reorientation (guidance back to covenant path). This verse epitomizes the prophetic paradox: judgment and salvation coexist, with the latter emerging from the former's necessary work.

Isaiah 57:19

The creation of new fruit of the lips—"peace, peace, to the far and the near"—represents restored speech, reconciliation, and proclamation after the silence and shame of judgment. The repetition of "peace" emphasizes the totality and sufficiency of God's restoration, extending to all (far and near). The phrase "fruit of the lips" suggests thanksgiving, praise, and covenantal speech as the expression of healed relationship. This verse moves from private healing to public proclamation, imagining a community whose restored capacity to speak and praise demonstrates YHWH's efficacy and reliability.

Isaiah 57:20

The contrast between the righteous (promised rest and peace) and the wicked (compared to turbulent sea) establishes that eschatological peace is not universal but covenantal. The wicked's permanent turbulence—unable to rest—mirrors their spiritual condition: unrighteousness generates internal chaos and cosmic disruption. The sea imagery evokes chaos-mythology, suggesting that wickedness aligns humans with forces opposed to YHWH's order and creation. This verse reinforces that the promised peace requires covenant fidelity; rejection of covenant ensures continued turmoil.

Isaiah 57:21

The final verdict in verse 21—"There is no peace for the wicked"—crystallizes the prophetic judgment that covenant violation forecloses eschatological shalom. The statement's finality and universality establish an absolute correlation between righteousness and peace, wickedness and turbulence. This verse's placement as the conclusion to the extended judgment-and-consolation sequence reassures the faithful remnant that their fidelity will be vindicated and the wicked's fate sealed. The formula-like quality creates memorable theological closure: righteousness brings peace; wickedness brings turmoil.