The theme of this part is the vanished glory as in a funeral dirge, lamenting the moral loss of justice, but not concerning the wealth.
Verse 25 :[The Lord said:]
"And I will turn my hand upon thee, ::
and purely purge away thy dross, ::
and take away all thy tin: • "And purely purge away": "And will smelt away... as with
lye" (
ESV) or "and thoroughly 'refine with lye'".
Verse 26 :[The Lord said:]
"And I will restore your judges as at the first, ::
and your counselors as at the beginning. :
Afterward you shall be called the city of righteousness, ::
the faithful city." The
King James Version and
American Standard Version translate () as "judges"; the
New International Version interprets it as "leaders."
Verses 29–31 The
Jerusalem Bible separates verses 29–31 as an oracle "against tree worship", suggesting that the prophet "possibly has
Samaria in mind".
Verse 29 :
For they shall be ashamed of the oaks which ye have desired, and ye shall be confounded for the gardens that ye have chosen. • "Oaks", or
"terebinths" (Pistacia palaestina), • "Which ye have desired" or "which give you such pleasure". • "Garden" may refer to the "gardens" in
Isaiah 65:3.
Verse 31 :
And the strong shall be as tow, and the maker of it as a spark, and they shall both burn together, and none shall quench them. • "Quench": Illusion of a fire ("spark") which cannot be 'quenched', from the Hebrew root (), links this verse (the beginning chapter) to the last verse (of the ending chapter) of the whole book (
Isaiah 66:24; "their fire shall not be quenched). Moreover, it is also used in three other places: (1) of the servant in
Isaiah 42:3, that "a dimly burning wick ('smoking flax') he will not quench"; (2) that the fire devouring Edom "will not be quenched"; and (3) in
Isaiah 43:17 (those who oppose the 's path are "quenched like a wick"). ==See also==