The song of the vineyard

1 Let me sing for my beloved

the love song of my beloved

about his vineyard.

My beloved had a vineyard

on a fertile hillside.

2 He dug it up, cleared the stones,

and planted the choicest vines.

He built there a watchtower

and hewed out a winepress as well.

Then he looked

for a crop of good grapes,

but it yielded only wild grapes.

3 Now, inhabitants of Jerusalem and people of Judah,

judge between me and my vineyard.

4 What more was there to do

that I have not done for my vineyard?

Good grapes was the yield I expected,

why did it yield only sour grapes?

5 Now I will let you know

what I am going to do

with my vineyard:

I will remove its hedge

and it will be burned;

I will break down its wall

and it will be trampled on.

6 I will make it a wasteland,

I will neither prune nor hoe it,

and briers and thorns will grow there.

I command the clouds, as well,

not to send rain on it.

7 The vineyard of Yahweh Sabaoth

is the people of Israel,

and the people of Judah

are his pleasant vine.

He looked for justice,

but found bloodshed;

He looked for righteousness

but heard cries of distress.

Woe to you rich!

8 Woe to you who join house to house,

who add field to field!

So no room will remain,

with you alone in the land?

9 Yahweh Sabaoth has sworn in my hearing:

“Many houses will remain in ruins,

beautiful mansions without occupants.

10 Ten acres of vineyard

will yield only a barrel of wine;

ten bushels of seed,

only a bushel of grain.”

11 Woe to those who rise early in the morning

to run after strong drink,

and tarry late in the evening

till they are inflamed with wine.

12 They have lyres and harps,

timbrels and flutes,

and wine at their banquets;

but they have no thought for the deeds of the Lord,

nor do they see his plans.

13 Thus my people will go into exile

for want of understanding,

their dignitaries dying of hunger,

their masses parched with thirst.

14 Therefore the grave has enlarged its throat

and opened its mouth to the full;

it swallows the upper crust of Zion,

their throngs and their revelry.

15 Man shall be humbled

and the mortal fallen,

and the eyes of the haughty cast down.

16 But Yahweh Sabaoth will be exalted

when he comes in judgment;

the sentences of the holy God

will reveal his holiness.

( 17 Then will the lambs graze as at pasture,

fatlings and kids will browse among the ruins.)

18 Woe to those who haul their wrongs with cords of deceit,

to those who pull a cart of sins,

19 to those who say, “Let God hurry,

let him speed up his work

so that we may see it.

Let the plans of the Holy One of Israel

draw near and come true,

which we are eager to learn about!”

20 Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil,

who change darkness for light

and light for darkness,

who give bitter for sweet

and sweet for bittter.

21 Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes

and take themselves for sages.

22 Woe to those who are champions in mixing drinks

and valiant at drinking bouts,

23 but acquit the guilty for a bribe

and deprive the innocent of his right.

24 Therefore, as the tongues of fire lick up stubble,

as dry grass sinks down in the flames,

so their roots will rot,

and their flowers be blown away like dust,

for they have rejected the law of Yahweh Sabaoth

and scorned the word of the Holy One of Israel.

25 Therefore the Lord,

his wrath burning against his people,

raises his hand against them

and strikes them down.

The mountains quake:

the corpses litter the streets.

Yet for all this his anger does not subside,

his hand is still raised, poised to strike.

26 He gives a signal to nations afar,

he whistles to them from the ends of the earth;

speedily and swiftly they come.

27 None of them is weary, none stumbles

none slumbers or sleeps;

not a waist belt is loosened,

not a sandal-thong broken.

28 Their arrows are sharp,

all their bows are strong:

their horses’ hoofs seem like flint,

their chariot wheels like the whirlwind.

29 They roar like young lions;

they growl as they seize their prey,

no one to rescue it as they carry it off.

30 On that day they will roar over these people

like the roaring of the sea.

Just look at the land –

darkness and distress,

the light flickering out in shadows,

darkened finally by the clouds.

  • Isaiah 3,14
  • Isaiah 27,2
  • Hosea 10,1
  • Jeremiah 2,21
  • Psalms 80,9
  • Mathew 20,1
  • Mathew 21,33
  • John 15,1
  • Deuteronomy 32,32
  • Isaiah 32,13
  • Deuteronomy 1,8
  • Jeremiah 24,10
  • Leviticus 25,23
  • Deuteronomy 15,1
  • Micah 2,2
  • Isaiah 28,7
  • Isaiah 56,12
  • Amos 4,1
  • Isaiah 1,26
  • Numbers 20,13
  • Jeremiah 17,15
  • Letter of Peter 2 3,4
  • Micah 3,2
  • Letter to the Romans 1,21
  • Jeremiah 5,15
  • Jeremiah 6,22
  • Nahum 2,2
  • Isaiah 8,22
  • Joel 2,2
  • Zephaniah 1,15
Is 5,1

Song of the "love" of God who at the end, threatens to destroy those who despise him. Isaiah knows this well because he encountered God whose love is tender and terrible.

The prophets readily exchange the language of religion for the language of passionate love. Friend, Lover, Husband: The Lord does not resemble God as depicted by the Jews.

The vineyard is the people whom Yahweh nurtured over the centuries of their history and among whom so many prophets worked, watering it with their sweat, if not with their blood. Perhaps we should not look for a specific meaning in every detail of the parable: the tower, the wine press. In a somewhat similar text, in Micah 6:1-5, God reminds us of all he has done for his people.

After seeing how considerate the Lord has been, Isaiah denounces the injustice and oppression which rule daily life in Jerusalem. In that, he sees proof that the law, the miracles and the blessings of the Lord have been in vain. Their history shows that the kingdom of David is already a failure and Judah will be destroyed.

The same image of the vineyard appears in Isaiah 27:2 and in Jeremiah 2:21. Jesus will recall it in John 15.

Is 5,8

God does not tolerate that some occupy all the land when many are without a plot to live (see Lev 25:8). There is no justification either for a society leaving all the capital in the hands of owners so that most of the workers cannot benefit from the riches of their own country. Isaiah's words also condemn those who take over all the real power in a society, preventing others from exercising their human responsibilities.

The six woes point to the same people: to the rich and the noble who are unwilling to shoulder their responsibilities towards their people and who squander money. Their own judgment has become corrupt.

When false values are imposed on a society it culminates in evil. This is the social scandal which Jesus addressed in Matthew 18:7.

Isaiah predicts the exile without hesitation. It would have been wiser to understand the will of God and the way in which he rules over events. The people unfortunately make use of their intelligence only to advance their own interests or to excel in the empty games of the rich. They allow their own people to sink into poverty.

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