A modern English translation drawn directly from the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek texts. Translated word-for-word where possible, by a committee with scholarly oversight.
Uses the same source texts as the ESV, NASB, and most academic Bibles, including the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia and the Nestle-Aland critical edition.
Isaiah 10
Chapter summary coming soon.
Verse 1. Woe to those who enact unjust statutes and issue oppressive decrees,
Verse 2. to deprive the poor of fair treatment and withhold justice from the oppressed of My people, to make widows their prey and orphans their plunder.
Verse 3. What will you do on the day of reckoning when devastation comes from afar? To whom will you flee for help? Where will you leave your wealth?
Verse 4. Nothing will remain but to crouch among the captives or fall among the slain. Despite all this, His anger is not turned away; His hand is still upraised.
Verse 5. Woe to Assyria, the rod of My anger; the staff in their hands is My wrath.
Verse 6. I will send him against a godless nation; I will dispatch him against a people destined for My rage, to take spoils and seize plunder, and to trample them down like clay in the streets.
Verse 7. But this is not his intention; this is not his plan. For it is in his heart to destroy and cut off many nations.
Verse 8. “Are not all my commanders kings?” he says.
Verse 9. “Is not Calno like Carchemish? Is not Hamath like Arpad? Is not Samaria like Damascus?
Verse 10. As my hand seized the idolatrous kingdoms whose images surpassed those of Jerusalem and Samaria,
Verse 11. and as I have done to Samaria and its idols, will I not also do to Jerusalem and her idols?”
Verse 12. So when the Lord has completed all His work against Mount Zion and Jerusalem, He will say, “I will punish the king of Assyria for the fruit of his arrogant heart and the proud look in his eyes.
Verse 13. For he says: ‘By the strength of my hand I have done this, and by my wisdom, for I am clever. I have removed the boundaries of nations and plundered their treasures; like a mighty one I subdued their rulers.
Verse 14. My hand reached as into a nest to seize the wealth of the nations. Like one gathering abandoned eggs, I gathered all the earth. No wing fluttered, no beak opened or chirped.’”
Verse 15. Does an axe raise itself above the one who swings it? Does a saw boast over him who saws with it? It would be like a rod waving the one who lifts it, or a staff lifting him who is not wood!
Verse 16. Therefore the Lord GOD of Hosts will send a wasting disease among Assyria’s stout warriors, and under his pomp will be kindled a fire like a burning flame.
Verse 17. And the Light of Israel will become a fire, and its Holy One a flame. In a single day it will burn and devour Assyria’s thorns and thistles.
Verse 18. The splendor of its forests and orchards, both soul and body, it will completely destroy, as a sickness consumes a man.
Verse 19. The remaining trees of its forests will be so few that a child could count them.
Verse 20. On that day the remnant of Israel and the survivors of the house of Jacob will no longer depend on him who struck them, but they will truly rely on the LORD, the Holy One of Israel.
Verse 21. A remnant will return—a remnant of Jacob—to the Mighty God.
Verse 22. Though your people, O Israel, be like the sand of the sea, only a remnant will return. Destruction has been decreed, overflowing with righteousness.
Verse 23. For the Lord GOD of Hosts will carry out the destruction decreed upon the whole land.
Verse 24. Therefore this is what the Lord GOD of Hosts says: “O My people who dwell in Zion, do not fear Assyria, who strikes you with a rod and lifts his staff against you as the Egyptians did.
Verse 25. For in just a little while My fury against you will subside, and My anger will turn to their destruction.”
Verse 26. And the LORD of Hosts will brandish a whip against them, as when He struck Midian at the rock of Oreb. He will raise His staff over the sea, as He did in Egypt.
Verse 27. On that day the burden will be lifted from your shoulders, and the yoke from your neck. The yoke will be broken because your neck will be too large.
Verse 28. Assyria has entered Aiath and passed through Migron, storing their supplies at Michmash.
Verse 29. They have crossed at the ford: “We will spend the night at Geba.” Ramah trembles; Gibeah of Saul flees.
Verse 30. Cry aloud, O Daughter of Gallim! Listen, O Laishah! O wretched Anathoth!
Verse 31. Madmenah flees; the people of Gebim take refuge.
Verse 32. Yet today they will halt at Nob, shaking a fist at the mount of Daughter Zion, at the hill of Jerusalem.
Verse 33. Behold, the Lord GOD of Hosts will lop off the branches with terrifying power. The tall trees will be cut down, the lofty ones will be felled.
Verse 34. He will clear the forest thickets with an axe, and Lebanon will fall before the Mighty One.