Isaiah 65
The Lord declares that He was ready to answer but Israel did not ask, that He was ready to be found but Israel did not seek Him, establishing divine willingness to restore that encounters human resistance. The oracle announces judgment against those who persist in rebellion, burn incense on brick altars, and spend nights in tombs, yet promises preservation for a faithful remnant. The vision includes the promise that the Lord will create new heavens and a new earth and that the former things will not be remembered, establishing radical cosmic renewal. The oracle promises that Jerusalem will be a delight and her people a joy, and that no more will be heard the sound of weeping and crying, establishing the eschatological vision of a community without suffering or sorrow. The passage promises long life for the redeemed and the fulfillment of their desires in the new heavens and earth, establishing the permanence and satisfaction of the eschatological age. The vision includes the promise that the wolf and the lamb will feed together and that dust will be the serpent's food, establishing cosmic peace and harmony. Isaiah 65 demonstrates that despite persistent rebellion, God preserves a faithful remnant and accomplishes an ultimate vision of restoration and renewal. The chapter establishes that the eschatological vision encompasses not merely the restoration of Jerusalem but the creation of new heavens and a new earth.
Isaiah 65:19
YHWH announces that the voice of weeping will no longer be heard, nor the voice of crying in Jerusalem, establishing that eschatological peace includes cessation of suffering. The specific mention that an infant will not die there but one living a hundred years will be young indicates not merely death-elimination but radical lifespan extension. The curse of Cain (wanderer) comes upon the wicked, establishing that the unfaithful's fate is exile and homelessness. This verse articulates positive and negative eschatological realities: the faithful experience eliminated suffering and extended life; the faithless experience permanent exile.
Isaiah 65:20
The promise that one dying at a hundred years will be considered a youth and one falling short of a hundred will be considered accursed suggests radical lifespan extension in the eschatological age. The equation of premature death with curse-status indicates that the restored world eliminates death except as ultimate eschatological sign. The rhetorical structure—those at one hundred considered young—suggests that the normal human lifespan is exponentially extended. This verse articulates one dimension of eschatological transformation: mortality itself is fundamentally transformed, approaching elimination.
Isaiah 65:21
The promise that one will build a house and inhabit it, plant a vineyard and eat its fruit, establishes the fundamental eschatological blessing: security of possession and enjoyment of one's labor. The specific mention of building and planting evokes Edenic activity: humans can engage in creative work and reap its benefits. The promise directly addresses the exilic fear of dispossession: the restored community will permanently own their property. The building-planting imagery suggests both material prosperity and creative human flourishing. This verse grounds eschatological blessing in concrete economic security and labor's reward.