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Isaiah 1:5

Context

1:5 1 Why do you insist on being battered?

Why do you continue to rebel? 2 

Your head has a massive wound, 3 

your whole body is weak. 4 

Isaiah 13:5

Context

13:5 They come from a distant land,

from the horizon. 5 

It is the Lord with his instruments of judgment, 6 

coming to destroy the whole earth. 7 

1 sn In vv. 5-9 Isaiah addresses the battered nation (5-8) and speaks as their representative (9).

2 tn Heb “Why are you still beaten? [Why] do you continue rebellion?” The rhetorical questions express the prophet’s disbelief over Israel’s apparent masochism and obsession with sin. The interrogative construction in the first line does double duty in the parallelism. H. Wildberger (Isaiah, 1:18) offers another alternative by translating the two statements with one question: “Why do you still wish to be struck that you persist in revolt?”

3 tn Heb “all the head is ill”; NRSV “the whole head is sick”; CEV “Your head is badly bruised.”

4 tn Heb “and all the heart is faint.” The “heart” here stands for bodily strength and energy, as suggested by the context and usage elsewhere (see Jer 8:18; Lam 1:22).

5 tn Heb “from the end of the sky.”

6 tn Or “anger”; cf. KJV, ASV “the weapons of his indignation.”

7 tn Or perhaps, “land” (so KJV, NAB, NASB, NLT). Even though the heading and subsequent context (see v. 17) indicate Babylon’s judgment is in view, the chapter has a cosmic flavor that suggests that the coming judgment is universal in scope. Perhaps Babylon’s downfall occurs in conjunction with a wider judgment, or the cosmic style is poetic hyperbole used to emphasize the magnitude and importance of the coming event.



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