Isaiah 24:2

24:2 Everyone will suffer – the priest as well as the people,

the master as well as the servant,

the elegant lady as well as the female attendant,

the seller as well as the buyer,

the borrower as well as the lender,

the creditor as well as the debtor.

Isaiah 49:5-7

49:5 So now the Lord says,

the one who formed me from birth to be his servant –

he did this to restore Jacob to himself,

so that Israel might be gathered to him;

and I will be honored in the Lord’s sight,

for my God is my source of strength 10 

49:6 he says, “Is it too insignificant a task for you to be my servant,

to reestablish the tribes of Jacob,

and restore the remnant 11  of Israel? 12 

I will make you a light to the nations, 13 

so you can bring 14  my deliverance to the remote regions of the earth.”

49:7 This is what the Lord,

the protector 15  of Israel, their Holy One, 16  says

to the one who is despised 17  and rejected 18  by nations, 19 

a servant of rulers:

“Kings will see and rise in respect, 20 

princes will bow down,

because of the faithful Lord,

the Holy One of Israel who has chosen you.”


tn Heb “and it will be like the people, like the priest.”

tn Heb “like the servant, like his master.”

tn Heb “like the female servant, like her mistress.”

tn Heb “like the buyer, like the seller.”

tn Heb “like the lender, like the borrower.”

tn Heb “like the creditor, just as the one to whom he lends.”

tn Heb “from the womb” (so KJV, NASB).

tn The words “he did this” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons. In the Hebrew text the infinitive construct of purpose is subordinated to the previous statement.

tn The vav (ו) + imperfect is translated here as a result clause; one might interpret it as indicating purpose, “and so I might be honored.”

10 tn Heb “and my God is [perhaps, “having been”] my strength.” The disjunctive structure (vav [ו] + subject + verb) is interpreted here as indicating a causal circumstantial clause.

11 tn Heb “the protected [or “preserved”] ones.”

12 sn The question is purely rhetorical; it does not imply that the servant was dissatisfied with his commission or that he minimized the restoration of Israel.

13 tn See the note at 42:6.

14 tn Heb “be” (so KJV, ASV); CEV “you must take.”

15 tn Heb “redeemer.” See the note at 41:14.

16 sn See the note on the phrase “the Holy One of Israel” in 1:4.

17 tc The Hebrew text reads literally “to [one who] despises life.” It is preferable to read with the Qumran scroll 1QIsaa לבזוי, which should be vocalized as a passive participle, לִבְזוּי (livzuy, “to the one despised with respect to life” [נֶפֶשׁ is a genitive of specification]). The consonantal sequence וי was probably misread as ה in the MT tradition. The contextual argument favors the 1QIsaa reading. As J. N. Oswalt (Isaiah [NICOT], 2:294) points out, the three terse phrases “convey a picture of lowliness, worthlessness, and helplessness.”

18 tn MT’s Piel participle (“to the one who rejects”) does not fit contextually. The form should be revocalized as a Pual, “to the one rejected.”

19 tn Parallelism (see “rulers,” “kings,” “princes”) suggests that the singular גּוֹי (goy) be emended to a plural or understood in a collective sense (see 55:5).

20 tn For this sense of קוּם (qum), see Gen 19:1; 23:7; 33:10; Lev 19:32; 1 Sam 20:41; 25:41; 1 Kgs 2:19; Job 29:8.