Table of Contents
Isaiah 5
Isaiah 5
1 Now will I sing to my wellbeloved a song of my beloved touching his vineyard. My wellbeloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill:
2 And he fenced it, and gathered out the stones thereof, and planted it with the choicest vine, and built a tower in the midst of it, and also made a winepress therein: and he looked that it should bring forth grapes, and it brought forth wild grapes.
3 And now, O inhabitants of Jerusalem, and men of Judah, judge, I pray you, betwixt me and my vineyard.
4 What could have been done more to my vineyard, that I have not done in it? wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes?
5 And now go to; I will tell you what I will do to my vineyard: I will take away the hedge thereof, and it shall be eaten up; and break down the wall thereof, and it shall be trodden down:
6 And I will lay it waste: it shall not be pruned, nor digged; but there shall come up briers and thorns: I will also command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it.
7 For the vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the house of Israel, and the men of Judah his pleasant plant: and he looked for judgment, but behold oppression; for righteousness, but behold a cry.
8 Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth!
9 In mine ears said the Lord of hosts, Of a truth many houses shall be desolate, even great and fair, without inhabitant.
10 Yea, ten acres of vineyard shall yield one bath, and the seed of an homer shall yield an ephah.
11 Woe unto them that rise up early in the morning, that they may follow strong drink; that continue until night, till wine inflame them!
12 And the harp, and the viol, the tabret, and pipe, and wine, are in their feasts: but they regard not the work of the Lord, neither consider the operation of his hands.
13 Therefore my people are gone into captivity, because they have no knowledge: and their honourable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst.
14 Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without measure: and their glory, and their multitude, and their pomp, and he that rejoiceth, shall descend into it.
15 And the mean man shall be brought down, and the mighty man shall be humbled, and the eyes of the lofty shall be humbled:
16 But the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgment, and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness.
17 Then shall the lambs feed after their manner, and the waste places of the fat ones shall strangers eat.
18 Woe unto them that draw iniquity with cords of vanity, and sin as it were with a cart rope:
19 That say, Let him make speed, and hasten his work, that we may see it: and let the counsel of the Holy One of Israel draw nigh and come, that we may know it!
20 Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!
21 Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in their own sight!
22 Woe unto them that are mighty to drink wine, and men of strength to mingle strong drink:
23 Which justify the wicked for reward, and take away the righteousness of the righteous from him!
24 Therefore as the fire devoureth the stubble, and the flame consumeth the chaff, so their root shall be as rottenness, and their blossom shall go up as dust: because they have cast away the law of the Lord of hosts, and despised the word of the Holy One of Israel.
25 Therefore is the anger of the Lord kindled against his people, and he hath stretched forth his hand against them, and hath smitten them: and the hills did tremble, and their carcases were torn in the midst of the streets. For all this his anger is not turned away, but his hand is stretched out still.
26 And he will lift up an ensign to the nations from far, and will hiss unto them from the end of the earth: and, behold, they shall come with speed swiftly:
27 None shall be weary nor stumble among them; none shall slumber nor sleep; neither shall the girdle of their loins be loosed, nor the latchet of their shoes be broken:
28 Whose arrows are sharp, and all their bows bent, their horses' hoofs shall be counted like flint, and their wheels like a whirlwind:
29 Their roaring shall be like a lion, they shall roar like young lions: yea, they shall roar, and lay hold of the prey, and shall carry it away safe, and none shall deliver it.
30 And in that day they shall roar against them like the roaring of the sea: and if one look unto the land, behold darkness and sorrow, and the light is darkened in the heavens thereof.
Notes
Cross Reference
Commentary
Rashi
Verse 1
<html><b>I will now sing for my beloved</b> The prophet says: “I will now sing for my beloved and in his place and as his messenger. [The word לִידִידִי would usually mean, ‘to my beloved.’] Similar to (Exodus 14: 4): “The Lord will wage war for you (לָכֶם), for you [not ‘to you’].” <b>the song of my beloved about his vineyard</b> This is the song of my beloved that he sang for his vineyard, about his vineyard, as (Genesis 26:7): “And the people of the place asked about his wife (לְאִשְׁתּוֹ), about his wife [not ‘to his wife’].” <b>a vineyard in a fertile corner</b> in a corner that produces fat fruit, like good oil. <b>fertile</b> Heb. בן-שמן [lit. the son of oil, i.e.,] a corner fit for oil, for olives to produce oil, [like] (I Samuel 20:31) בֶּן-מָוֶת, [lit. a son of death,] fit to die. This is a parable, and at the end of the section, he will explain it. (This is Odom Horishon) (This is Hakodosh Boruch Hu) (In Gan Eden)</html>
Verse 2
<html><b>And he fenced it in</b> Heb. וַיְעַזְּקֵהוּ. He fenced it and walled it around, surrounded like a sort of ring, translated into Aramaic as עִיזְקָא. <b>and he cleared it of stones</b> Heb. וַיְסַקְלֵהוּ. He cleared it of the stones that are detrimental to the vines, comp. (infra 62:10) “Clear of stones (סַקְּלוֹ מֵאֶבֶן).” <b>and he planted it with the choicest vines</b> They are the best of all branches for planting. <b>and he built a tower in its midst</b> A press in which to press the grapes. <b>and also a vat he hewed therein</b> Heb. יֶקֶב, the pit that is before the press, to receive the wine. Likewise, every יֶקֶב in Scripture is an expression denoting a pit. Likewise (Zechariah 14:4), עַד יִקְבֵי הַמֶלֶךְ, which Jonathan renders, “Until the King’s pits.” This is the depth of the ocean. Therefore, the expression of hewing applies, just like (Deut. 6:11): “and hewn pits.” <b>and he hoped to produce grapes</b> And my beloved hoped that this vineyard would produce grapes for him. <b>and it produced wild berries</b> Heb. בְּאֻשִׁים. Similar to grapes, and they are called lanbrojjses in O.F. Regarding the ten canopies that are stated in that chapter about Chirom the king of Tyre. From the Yetzer Horah, until he ate from the tree and then the Yetzer Horah entered him. The beginning of his creation is from the place of the altar. And he blew into his nostrils the breath of life from the upper realms. A spring flowing, the fountain of wisdom. That he should know and praise you. putrid things; he reviled and blasphemed. Since the end of the parable comes to say that they too did like him, he asks them the judgment.</html>
Verse 5
<html><b>I will remove its hedge</b> I will remove the fence that covers and protects it. מְשׂוּכָה is a fence of thorns; גָדֵר is a fence of stones. <b>and it shall be</b> [i.e.,] the vineyard. <b>eaten up</b> For cattle and wild beasts will graze there. What appears in my eyes to do to him and I did it. I expelled him from amidst his canopies. He will eventually die and evil beats will rule over him. I expelled from the enclosure of Paradise.</html>
Verse 6
<html><b>And I will make it a desolation</b> Heb. בָתָה, an expression of desolation and emptiness. Compare (infra 7:19): “in the desolate valleys (הַבַּתּוֹת).” <b>nor hoed</b> Heb. יֵעָדֵר ; this is an expression of digging in a vineyard. <b>the shamir and desolation will come up</b> Heb. שָׁמִיר וָשָׁיִת. Menahem ben Seruk interprets them as kinds of thorns (Machbereth Menahem p. 176), but I say that “shamir” is a word denoting a strong worm that splits stones, with which Solomon built the Temple, like the matter that is written (Ezekiel 3:19), “Like a shamir, stronger than rock.” <b>desolation</b> Heb. שַׁיִת, an expression similar to (Lamentations 3:47), “desolation (הַשְׁאֵת) and breach,” an expression similar to (infra 6:11), “shall be made desolate (תִּשָּׁאֶה) [as a wilderness”; i.e., it will be] empty with no one seeking it to enter it, and thereby worms will overrun it. I put him on his side, that I did not give him the Torah in his days. They did not learn from it not Zechus or good deeds. The Yetzer Horah ruled him and in the other generations for them to do disgusting things. I commanded him to keep guard and to guard the way of life.</html>
Verse 7
<html><b>For the vineyard of the Lord of Hosts is the House of Israel</b> To this vineyard are you compared, O House of Israel, for all that He did for this vineyard, He did for Israel. The vineyard represents Adam, for we find in Midrash Aggadah, in many places in Tanhuma, and in Genesis Rabbah [that] these passages are expounded concerning him, e.g., Adam was not expelled from Paradise until he reviled and blasphemed, as it is said: And He hoped to produce grapes,… (Gen. Rabbah 19:12). And in another place we find: He appointed guards over him that he should not eat from the Tree of Life, as it is said (verse 6): “And I will command the clouds…” (ibid. 21:8). And in this manner, [the following verses] can be expounded concerning him: <b>(1) My beloved had a vineyard. A vineyard</b> This [alludes to] Adam. <b>My beloved</b> This is the Holy One, blessed be He. <b>In a fertile corner</b> in the Garden of Eden. <b>(2) And he fenced it in</b> with the ten canopies mentioned in Ezekiel (28), in the section dealing with Hiram, king of Tyre. <b>And He cleared it of stones</b> Of temptation, until he ate from the tree, and temptation gained entry into him. <b>And He planted it with the choicest vines</b> The beginning of his formation was from the place of the altar. <b>And He built a tower in its midst</b> And He breathed into his nostrils the spirit of life, from the heavenly beings. <b>And also a vat He hewed therein</b> A spring flowing, the fountain of wisdom. <b>And He hoped to produce grapes</b> that he would thank Him and praise Him. <b>And it produced wild berries</b> putrid things; he reviled and blasphemed. <b>(3) Judge now</b> Since the end of the parable comes to say that they too did like him, he asks them the judgment. <b>(5) I will inform you</b> what I decided to do to him and I did. <b>I removed its hedge</b> I expelled him from amidst his canopies. <b>And it shall be eaten up</b> His end will be to die and to be ruled over by wild beasts. <b>Breach its wall</b> I expelled from the enclosure of Paradise. <b>(6) And I made it a desolation</b> I made him dwell in desolation, for I did not give the Torah in his days. <b>It shall neither be pruned nor hoed</b> They will learn from him neither merit nor good deeds. <b>The shamir and desolation will come up</b> Temptation ruled over him and his posterity, to perform corrupt deeds. <b>And I commanded the clouds</b> I appointed guards over him to guard the way of the Tree of Life. <b>(7) For the vineyard of the Lord of Hosts is the House of Israel</b> For the House of Israel is to Me like that vineyard; The ten tribes were to Me like a vineyard producing wine, like an olive orchard, in a fat corner, in a fat land, [producing anointing] oil for the priesthood, [anointing] oil for the kingdom, oil for the Menorah, oil for the meal offerings. I fenced them in first with the encirclement of the clouds of glory in the desert and I cleared them of stones, i.e., I cleansed them of the transgressors of the generation. I planted them with the choicest vines (שׂוֹרֵק) six hundred and six commandments, like the numerical value of שׂוֹרֵק, I added for them to the seven commandments that the children of Noah were commanded. I built a tower in their midst, My Tabernacle and My Temple, and also a vat, the altar and the pits [the pits by the side of the altar into which the remainder of the libations was poured.] <b>(2) And it produced wild berries</b> They corrupted their deeds. <b>(3) And now, dwellers of Jerusalem and men of Judah</b> who have not yet been exiled, please judge between me and between them concerning the evil that I brought on them; who sinned against whom? <b>What more could I have done</b> beneficial deeds <b>for My vineyard, and I have not done</b> for it? <b>(5) Now I will inform you</b> Even you who anger Mewhat is fitting in My eyes to do to My vineyard, according to all that I did to Adam, viz. <b>to remove its hedge</b> I will remove My Shechinah from them, the Shechinah that covers them, as it is said (infra 22:8), “And He bared the covert of Judah.” <b>Breach its wall</b> I will demolish its walls. <b>(6) And I will make it a desolation</b> And I will make them forsaken [from Targum Jonathan]. <b>It will neither be pruned nor hoed</b> They will not be visited nor will they be supported. [from Targum Jonathan]. <b>And the shamir and desolation will come up</b> And they will be wandering and forsaken, represented by the שָׁמִיר וָשָׁיִת [desolation] of the vineyard, and regarding the vineyard itself in another place, it is rendered הֲבָאִי וּבוּר, desolate and fallow. <b>And I will command the clouds</b> And I will command the prophets not to prophesy on your behalf [Jonathan]. Prophecy is analogous to rain, which the clouds receive from heaven; so do the prophets receive the divine prophecy. <b>The plant of His joy</b> Comp. נָטָע (Job 14:9), but since it is in the construct state, it is vowelized with a patach, like (Num. 7:88) בְּקַר זֶבַח הַשְּׁלָמִים, “the cattle of the peace offerings.” <b>and He hoped</b> that they would perform justice, and behold, there was מִשְׂפָּח, an accumulation of sin upon sin, like (I Sam. 26:19), “From cleaving (מֵהִסְתַּפֵּחַ),” also (ibid. 2:36), “Take me now into (סְפָחֵנִי).” Another explanation is that it is an expression of a lesion, and since it is a similar expression, for, in pronunciation, מִשְׂפָּח resembles מִשְׁפָּט, and so, זְעָקָה resembles צְדָקָה, it fell through divine inspiration into the prophet’s mouth.</html>
Verse 8
<html><b>Woe to those who join a house to a house</b> Twenty-two instances of אַשְׁרֵי, fortunate, were said in the Book of Psalms concerning those who fulfill [the tenets of] the Torah, and Isaiah said twenty-two times, “הוֹי,” woe, concerning the wicked. <b>Woe</b> An expression of a cry of a sigh concerning the impending retribution. <b>those who join a house to a house</b> They draw their houses one to the other, thereby taking the land of the weak poor man between the two houses, and so <b>a field to a field they draw near until there is no place</b> No place for the poor man to live. <b>and you will be settled alone in the midst of the land</b> You think that neither the Holy One, blessed be He, nor the poor, have a share in the land. His share of the tithes you are stealing, and the poor, [you are robbing] of their land, so that you alone will occupy it.</html>
Verse 9
<html><b>In my ears [spoke] the Lord of Hosts</b> Said the prophet, Both my ears heard when the decree was decreed upon them by the Lord, and with an oath, “Truly, because of this thing, great houses will become desolate, yea, large ones and good ones, without inhabitants.”</html>
Verse 10
<html><b>For ten acres of vineyard</b> And, because of the famine, the inhabitants of the house will be exiled, leaving no one dwelling in them. This, too, will be for your payment in kind for bringing one field near to the other field, for you have stolen the share of the Omnipresent in the tithe of the land. <b>ten acres of vineyard</b> arpent in French, and I say that the amount of land requiring the work of one day with a yoke of oxen is called צֶמֶד, a yoke. <b>will produce one bath</b> One measure of wine. A bath is three se’ah. <b>and the seed of a homer</b> A place where a kur, which is thirty se’ah of grain, is usually produced, will produce an ephahthree se’ah.</html>
Verse 11
<html><b>They sit until late in the evening</b> to drink wine at night. <b>wine inflames them</b> It burns in them.</html>
Verse 12
<html><b>harp and lute</b> A lute has more strings than a harp. [Perhaps Rashi explains נֵבֶל as a lyre, which may have more strings than a harp.] Now why is it called נֵבֶל? Because it disgraces (מְנַבֵּל) all kinds of musical instruments. In Midrash Tehillim (81:3). <b>tamborine</b> That was made of skin. <b>a flute</b> A flute of reed, chalemel in O.F. <b>and the work of the Lord they do not regard</b> And in the Torah of the Lord they did not look [from Jonathan]. <b>and the deed of His hands they have not seen</b> They pretended that they did not see His mighty deeds. Another explanation is: They did not praise Him in the morning by reciting, “He Who forms light,” nor in the evening, by reciting, “He Who brings on the evenings.”</html>
Verse 13
<html><b>because of lack of knowledge</b> because their heart was without knowledge. <b>and its esteemed ones shall die of hunger</b> Heb. וכבודו מתי רעב [lit. and its honor dead ones of hunger.] [Some editions add:] Payment in kind, corresponding to the satiety. <b>shall be parched from thirst</b> Thirst corresponds to their elaborate drinking feasts. Heb. צחה Aramaic for thirst.</html>
Verse 14
<html><b>Therefore, the nether-world has expanded</b> Retribution corresponding to deed; they expanded themselves to swallow much food and drink, and they opened their mouth to swallow, so will the nether world expand itself to swallow. <b>and opened</b> Heb. פָּעֲרָה. <b>without measure</b> Without end; and why [did the grave open] without measure? Because these people had no measure or limit to their enjoyments. <b>shall descend</b> There the splendor of Jerusalem. <b>And those who rejoice therein</b> Heb. ועלז בה. [I.e., those who rejoiced in Jerusalem, or in all the Land of Israel, with the plenty they had there, will fall into Sheol, i.e., they will die.]</html>
Verse 15
<html><b>And man shall be humbled…</b> and the strong of men shall be weakened. [after Jonathan]. According to the Midrashic interpretation (Sotah 48a), this is the Holy One, blessed be He. They caused Him to appear as a man who is stunned. [The expression originates in Jeremiah 14:9]. And so Scripture states (Deut. 32:18): “The Rock that begot you, you have weakened (תֶּשִׁי),” [interpreting the word as originating from תָּשׁ, weak,] and Scripture states [further] (Ecclesiastes 10:18): “Through slothfulness, the One Who frames His upper chambers will become impoverished.”</html>
Verse 16
<html><b>And the Lord of Hosts shall be exalted through judgment</b> When He executes judgment upon them, His Name shall be exalted in the world. <b>through judgment</b> Jostise [justice] in O.F. <b>and the holy God</b> shall be hallowed among the righteous remaining of you.</html>
Verse 17
<html><b>And lambs shall graze as their wont</b> The righteous who are compared to a flock of ewes. <b>as their wont</b> Heb. כדברם. According to their habit, with equity and with a measure, guiding their affairs with justice, like these lambs. [Variant reading: According to their habit, with equity and of their own, for there will no longer be wicked people in the world, who will rob them.] Our Rabbis expounded כְּדָבְרָם to mean: According to all that was spoken regarding them, [i.e.,] the consolations spoken for them. <b>and…the ruins of the fat ones</b> the houses of the wicked, who are fat. <b>sojourners shall eat</b> The righteous, who are like sojourners, shall eat them. <b>fat</b> Heb. מֵחִים, meaning “fat,” as (Psalms 66: 15): “Burnt offerings of fatlings will I offer up.”</html>
Verse 18
<html><b>Woe to those who draw the iniquity</b> They draw the evil inclination upon themselves little by little; at first with ropes of nothingness, like the thread of a spider web. And since it provokes them, it continuously gains strength until it becomes like cart ropes, with which they tie a wagon in order to pull it. <b>nothingness</b> Heb. שָׁוְא, a thing that has no tangibility. <b>sin</b> Heb. חַטָּאָה, sin.</html>
Verse 19
<html><b>Let Him hurry; let Him hasten His deed</b> [i.e.,] the retribution He says He will bring. <b>so that we may see</b> whose word will stand up.</html>
Verse 20
<html><b>Those who say of the evil that it is good</b> They praise idolators [var. idolatry], but they consider it evil to worship the Holy One, blessed be He, Who is good. <b>who present darkness as light</b> A thing which is destined to bring darkness upon them, they say, will bring light to them. <b>who present bitter as sweet</b> Iniquity, [var. idolatry] which is destined to bring upon them bitter retribution, they say, will be sweet for them. <b>and sweet as bitter</b> The sweet worship of the Holy One, blessed be He, they say, is bitter.</html>
Verse 22
<html><b>to mix strong wine</b> Heb. לִמְסֹךְ. To mix (לִמְזֹג) strong wine. Preparation [of the beverage] is called מֶסֶךְ.</html>
Verse 23
<html><b>and the innocence of the innocent</b> who are fit to be exonerated in court, they take away from him, and find him guilty in his suit, and rob him of his money.</html>
Verse 24
<html><b>Therefore</b> this thing shall be to them… <b>as a flame of fire consumes stubble</b> [lit.] as consuming the stubble a flame of fire. <b>and straw</b> Jonathan renders: chaff, the straw of ears of grain; and like straw that the flame shrivels and turns to ashes. <b>like rot</b> Like something that melts. <b>and their blossom</b> Their greatness; just as the dust that is raised before the wind and goes away, so will it go away.</html>
Verse 25
<html><b>therefore</b> [i.e.,] because of these deeds of theirs. <b>and the mountains have quaked</b> [This is symbolic of] their kings and their princes. <b>like spittle</b> Heb. כַּסּוּחָה, like spittle and vomit, which is expelled (נִיסָח) from a person’s body, which is repugnant. In the language of the Rabbis, it is called סְחִי and so (Lamentations 3:45): “Loathsome and rejected.” <b>in the midst of the streets</b> So they will be loathsome among the nations. <b>with all this</b> that has come upon them. <b>His anger has not turned back</b> They have not been rectified with their deeds to cause His anger to turn back. <b>and His hand is still outstretched</b> to harm them.</html>
Verse 26
<html><b>And He shall raise</b> i.e., the Holy One, blessed be He. <b>an ensign to the nations</b> and signal to them to gather and to come upon them. Raising an ensign (נֵס) is like a long pole (כְּלוּנָס), at the end of which they attach a cloth, [i.e., a flag,] and they climb to the top of a lofty mountain and see it from afar; and that is the sign for people to gather. Comp. (infra 49:22) “And to peoples I will raise My ensign (נִסִּי)”; comp. also (Numbers 21:8), “And set it upon a pole (נֵס),” meaning a pole (כְּלוּנָס), perche in French, but since it is for a sign, it is called נֵס. <b>And He will whistle</b> sibler in O.F. This too is a sign for gathering. <b>from the end of the earth</b> that they should come from afar to besiege Israel. <b>swiftly he will come</b> The enemy [will come] upon them [swiftly,] as Scripture proceeds to explain.</html>
Verse 27
<html><b>None is weary or stumbles among them</b> No one will be weary and no one will stumble in his running, to fulfill (supra v. 19), “Let Him hurry, let Him hasten,” that they say before Him. <b>open up</b> Heb. נִפְתַּח, an expression of untying, as (Genesis 24:32): “And he untied (וַיְפַתַּח) the camels.” <b>nor will…be torn</b> And they will not see any omen of defeat, because of which to fear to come.</html>
Verse 28
<html><b>like flint</b> Jonathan renders: like a rock, similar to צור. <b>and his wheels</b> the wheels of his chariots.</html>
Verse 29
<html><b>He has a roar like a lion</b> His fear will be upon you like a lion. <b>and he will retrieve</b> He will save it from all those who try to save it. יַפְלִיט is esmoucer in O.F. [to seize].</html>
Verse 30
<html><b>And he will growl</b> That enemy [will growl] at the people of the Lord, mentioned above. <b>like the growling of the sea</b> whose waves roar, so will he come with roaring armies. <b>and he will look to the land</b> Heb. וְנִבַּט, an expression of looking. Israel will look and hope that the kings of the land, upon whom they rely, will assist them, like the matter that is stated (infra 31:1): “Those who go down to Egypt for aid.” <b>and behold darkness</b> for they will have no support. וְנִבַּט is in the passive voice (נִפְעַל) like וְלֹא נִפְתַּח, will not open up, וְלֹא נִתַּק, will not be torn, and the ‘vav’ causes the tense to be reversed to the future. Ediert esvuardeyd in O.F. <b>the distressed one and the light shall darken</b> Comp. (infra 31:3) “And the helper shall stumble and the one who is helped shall fall.” He who is distressed, upon whom the trouble has come, as well as he who comes to bring light to him, both of them will darken. Some interpret צַר as the moon, whose light was diminished, צַר [meaning narrow,] and אוֹר as the sun, [meaning light]. <b>in its eclipse</b> Heb. בַּעֲרִיפֶיהָ. When its darkening comes. An expression similar to (Deut. 32:2): “Shall drip (יַעֲרֹף) like rain,” for so is the nature that when rain falls, the light darkens.<html>