1

Return to Zion

Let the wilderness and the arid land rejoice, the desert be glad and blossom.

2

Covered with flowers, it sings and shouts with joy, adorned with the splendor of Lebanon, the magnificence of Carmel and Sharon. They, my people, see the glory of the Lord, the majesty of our God.

3

Give vigor to weary hands and strength to enfeebled knees.

4

Say to those who are afraid: “Have courage, do not fear. See, your God comes, demanding justice. He is the God who rewards, the God who comes to save you.”

5

Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unsealed.

6

Then will the lame leap as a hart and the tongue of the dumb sing and shout. For water will break out in the wilderness and streams gush forth from the desert.

7

The thirsty ground will become a pool, the arid land springs of water. In the haunts where once reptiles lay, grass will grow with reeds and rushes.

8

There will be a highway which will be called The Way of Holiness; no one unclean will pass over it nor any wicked fool stray there.

9

No lion will be found there nor any beast of prey. Only the redeemed will walk there.

10

For the ransomed of the Lord will return: with everlasting joy upon their heads, they will come to Zion singing, gladness and joy marching with them, while sorrow and sighing flee away.

Commentaries

34:1 - 35:10

Isaiah’s Eschatology II.

These two chapters, which reflect the historical background after Isaiah’s time, serve as an eschatological collection of themes found in Isaiah 1-33. First, images of the day of the Lord are described, showing vengeance bringing desolation, crop losses, thorns, chaos, and wild animals taking over the empty land. In contrast, chapter 35 depicts the Lord coming personally to restore the land, making Lebanon, Carmel, and Sharon fertile again and healing the blind, deaf, and lame (cf. Lk 7:18-23). The hostility toward Edom reappears (5-6), likely triggered by their infiltration into southern Judah after Jerusalem’s destruction (cf. Is 34:5-9; 63:1). Similar to Joshua’s time (cf. Jos 14-21), the Lord distributes the land to those returning from exile (17).


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