Yesha ‘yahu (Isa) 5

1 I want to sing a song for someone I love,

a song about my loved one and his vineyard.

My loved one had a vineyard

on a very fertile hill.

2 He dug up its stones and cleared them away,

planted it with the choicest vines,

built a watchtower in the middle of it,

and carved out in its rock a winepress.

He expected it to produce good grapes,

but it produced only sour, wild grapes.

3 Now, citizens of Yerushalayim and people of Y’hudah,

judge between me and my vineyard.

4 What more could I have done for my vineyard

that I haven’t already done in it?

So why, when I expected good grapes,

did it produce sour, wild grapes?

5 Now come, I will tell you

what I will do to my vineyard:

I will remove its hedge,

and [its grapes] will be eaten up;

I will break through its fence,

and [its vines] will be trampled down.

6 I will let it go to waste:

it will be neither pruned nor hoed,

but overgrown with briars and thorns.

I will also order the clouds

not to let rain fall on it.

7 Now the vineyard ofAdonai-Tzva’ot

is the house of Isra’el,

and the men of Y’hudah

are the plant he delighted in.

So he expected justice,

but look — bloodshed! —

and righteousness, but listen —

cries of distress!

8 Woe to those who add house to house

and join field to field,

until there’s no room for anyone else,

and you live in splendor alone on your land.

9 Adonai-Tzva’otsaid in my ears,

“Many houses will be brought to ruin,

large, magnificent ones left empty;

10 for a ten-acre vineyard will produce

only five gallons of wine,

and seed from five bushels of grain

will yield but half a bushel.”

11 Woe to those who get up early

to pursue intoxicating liquor;

who stay up late at night,

until wine inflames them.

12 They have lutes and lyres, drums and flutes,

and wine at their parties;

but they pay no attention to howAdonaiworks

and never look at what his hands have made.

13 For such lack of knowledge

my people go into exile;

this is also why their respected men starve

and their masses are parched from thirst.

14 Therefore Sh’ol has enlarged itself

and opened its limitless jaws —

and down go their nobles and masses,

along with their noise and revels.

15 The masses are lowered, the nobles are humbled —

proud looks will be brought down.

16 ButAdonai-Tzva’otis exalted through justice,

God the Holy One is consecrated through righteousness.

17 Then lambs will be able to feed

as if they were in their own pasture,

and those wandering through will eat

from the ruined fields of the overfed.

18 Woe to those who begin by pulling

at transgression with a thread,

but end by dragging sin along

as if with a cart rope.

19 They say, “We want God to speed up his work,

to hurry it along, so we can see it!

We want the Holy One of Isra’el’s plan

to come true right now, so we can be sure of it!”

20 Woe to those who call evil good

and good evil,

who change darkness into light

and light into darkness,

who change bitter into sweet

and sweet into bitter!

21 Woe to those seeing themselves as wise,

esteeming themselves as clever.

22 Woe to those who are heroes at drinking wine,

men whose power goes to mixing strong drinks,

23 who acquit the guilty for bribes

but deny justice to the righteous!

24 Therefore, as fire licks up the stubble,

and the chaff is consumed in the flame;

so their root will rot,

and their flowers scatter like dust;

because they have rejected theTorah

ofAdonai-Tzva’ot,

they have despised the word

of the Holy One of Isra’el.

25 This is whyAdonai’s anger blazed up against his people,

why he stretched out his hand against them and struck them

[so hard that] the hills shook,

and corpses lay like trash in the streets.

Even after all this, his anger remains,

his upraised hand still threatens.

26 He will give a signal to faraway nations,

he will whistle for them to come

from the ends of the earth;

and here they come, so fast! —

27 none of them tired or stumbling,

none of them sleeping or drowsy,

none with a loose belt,

none with a broken sandal-strap.

28 Their arrows are sharp,

all their bows are strung,

their horses’ hoofs are like flint,

and their [chariot] wheels like a whirlwind.

29 They will roar like lions —

yes, roaring like young lions,

they growl and seize the prey

and carry it off, with no one to rescue.

30 On that day they will growl at them,

like the sea when it growls —

and when one looks toward land,

one sees darkness closing in;

the light is dissipated

in the obscuring overcast.

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