Isaiah 51:17 to Isaiah 52:12. The Lord will turn the Captivity of Zion

The three oracles into which this passage naturally falls are these: (1) Isaiah 51:17. The prophet, returning to the thought with which the book opens (ch. Isaiah 40:2), announces that the period of Jerusalem's degradation has expired. The city is figured as a woman lying prostrate and senseless, intoxicated with the cup of the Lord's indignation which she has drunk to the dregs, her sons unable to help her (17 20). But the cup is now taken from her and passed to the enemies who had oppressed and insulted her (21 23).

(2) Isaiah 52:1-6. In a new apostrophe, the image is carried on; let Zion lay aside her soiled raiment, and the emblems of her slavery, and put on her holiday attire (1, 2). Jehovah will no longer endure that His name should be blasphemed through the banishment of His people (3 6).

(3) Isaiah 51:7. A description of the triumphal return of Jehovah to Zion, obviously based on the last section of the Prologue (ch. Isaiah 40:9-11). The writer pictures the scene of joy within the city when the heralds of the King arrive (7, 8); he calls on the waste places of Jerusalem to break forth into singing (9, 10); and finally, turning to the exiles (as in Isaiah 48:20 f.) he summons them to hasten their escape from the land of their captivity (11, 12).

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