HelpFinder Bible - Flipbook - Page 987
ISAIAH 16
page 617
A powerful army comes like smoke from
the north.
Each soldier rushes forward eager to fight.
32 What should we tell the Philistine messengers? Tell them,
“The Lord has built Jerusalem*;
its walls will give refuge to his oppressed
people.”
16
2
3
A Message about Moab
This message came to me concerning
Moab:
15
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
In one night the town of Ar will be leveled,
and the city of Kir will be destroyed.
Your people will go to their temple in Dibon
to mourn.
They will go to their sacred shrines to
weep.
They will wail for the fate of Nebo and
Medeba,
shaving their heads in sorrow and cutting
off their beards.
They will wear burlap as they wander the
streets.
From every home and public square will
come the sound of wailing.
The people of Heshbon and Elealeh will
cry out;
their voices will be heard as far away
as Jahaz!
The bravest warriors of Moab will cry out
in utter terror.
They will be helpless with fear.
My heart weeps for Moab.
Its people flee to Zoar and
Eglath-shelishiyah.
Weeping, they climb the road to Luhith.
Their cries of distress can be heard all
along the road to Horonaim.
Even the waters of Nimrim are dried up!
The grassy banks are scorched.
The tender plants are gone;
nothing green remains.
The people grab their possessions
and carry them across the Ravine of
Willows.
A cry of distress echoes through the land
of Moab
from one end to the other—
from Eglaim to Beer-elim.
The stream near Dibon* runs red with
blood,
but I am still not finished with Dibon!
Lions will hunt down the survivors—
both those who try to escape
and those who remain behind.
14:32 Hebrew Zion. 15:9 As in Dead Sea Scrolls, some Greek
manuscripts, and Latin Vulgate; Masoretic Text reads Dimon;
also in 15:9b. 16:8 Hebrew the sea. 16:11 Hebrew Kir-heres,
a variant spelling of Kir-hareseth.
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Send lambs from Sela as tribute
to the ruler of the land.
Send them through the desert
to the mountain of beautiful Zion.
The women of Moab are left like homeless
birds
at the shallow crossings of the Arnon
River.
“Help us,” they cry.
“Defend us against our enemies.
Protect us from their relentless attack.
Do not betray us now that we have
escaped.
Let our refugees stay among you.
Hide them from our enemies until the
terror is past.”
1
When oppression and destruction have
ended
and enemy raiders have disappeared,
then God will establish one of David’s
descendants as king.
He will rule with mercy and truth.
He will always do what is just
and be eager to do what is right.
We have heard about proud Moab—
about its pride and arrogance and rage.
But all that boasting has disappeared.
The entire land of Moab weeps.
Yes, everyone in Moab mourns
for the cakes of raisins from Kir-hareseth.
They are all gone now.
The farms of Heshbon are abandoned;
the vineyards at Sibmah are deserted.
The rulers of the nations have broken
down Moab—
that beautiful grapevine.
Its tendrils spread north as far as the town
of Jazer
and trailed eastward into the wilderness.
Its shoots reached so far west
that they crossed over the Dead Sea.*
So now I weep for Jazer and the vineyards
of Sibmah;
my tears will flow for Heshbon and
Elealeh.
There are no more shouts of joy
over your summer fruits and harvest.
Gone now is the gladness,
gone the joy of harvest.
There will be no singing in the vineyards,
no more happy shouts,
no treading of grapes in the winepresses.
I have ended all their harvest joys.
My heart’s cry for Moab is like a lament on
a harp.
I am filled with anguish for Kir-hareseth.*
The people of Moab will worship at their
pagan shrines,
but it will do them no good.