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Isaiah 10:5-7

Context
The Lord Turns on Arrogant Assyria

10:5 Assyria, the club I use to vent my anger, is as good as dead, 1 

a cudgel with which I angrily punish. 2 

10:6 I sent him 3  against a godless 4  nation,

I ordered him to attack the people with whom I was angry, 5 

to take plunder and to carry away loot,

to trample them down 6  like dirt in the streets.

10:7 But he does not agree with this,

his mind does not reason this way, 7 

for his goal is to destroy,

and to eliminate many nations. 8 

Isaiah 10:12

Context

10:12 But when 9  the sovereign master 10  finishes judging 11  Mount Zion and Jerusalem, then I 12  will punish the king of Assyria for what he has proudly planned and for the arrogant attitude he displays. 13 

1 tn Heb “Woe [to] Assyria, the club of my anger.” On הוֹי (hoy, “woe, ah”) see the note on the first phrase of 1:4.

2 tn Heb “a cudgel is he, in their hand is my anger.” It seems likely that the final mem (ם) on בְיָדָם (bÿyadam) is not a pronominal suffix (“in their hand”), but an enclitic mem. If so, one can translate literally, “a cudgel is he in the hand of my anger.”

3 sn Throughout this section singular forms are used to refer to Assyria; perhaps the king of Assyria is in view (see v. 12).

4 tn Or “defiled”; cf. ASV “profane”; NAB “impious”; NCV “separated from God.”

5 tn Heb “and against the people of my anger I ordered him.”

6 tn Heb “to make it [i.e., the people] a trampled place.”

7 tn Heb “but he, not so does he intend, and his heart, not so does it think.”

8 tn Heb “for to destroy [is] in his heart, and to cut off nations, not a few.”

9 tn The verb that introduces this verse serves as a discourse particle and is untranslated; see note on “in the future” in 2:2.

10 tn The Hebrew term translated “sovereign master” here and in vv. 16, 23, 24, 33 is אֲדֹנָי (’adonay).

11 tn Heb “his work on/against.” Cf. NAB, NASB, NRSV “on”; NIV “against.”

12 tn The Lord is speaking here, as in vv. 5-6a.

13 tn Heb “I will visit [judgment] on the fruit of the greatness of the heart of the king of Assyria, and on the glory of the height of his eyes.” The proud Assyrian king is likened to a large, beautiful fruit tree.



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