Against Damascus
1 An oracle concerning Damas cus:
“Damascus will cease to be a city
and will become a heap of ruins.
2 Her towns will be abandoned
and left as pasture for flocks;
there they will lie down afraid of no one.
Damascus will no longer be a kingdom,
3 so Ephraim will be left undefended.
From now on the remnant of Aram will have no more power than the children of Israel.”
This is Yahweh Sabaoth speaking.
4 On that day
the glory of Jacob will fade;
the fat of his flesh will waste away.
5 It will be as when a reaper
gathers the standing grain
and lops off the stalks,
or as when they gather the gleanings
in the Valley of Rephaim.
6 Yet some gleanings remain,
as when an olive tree is beaten –
two or three olives are left on the topmost bough,
four or five on the fruitful branches,
says Yahweh, the God of Israel.
7 On that day people will look to their Creator, their eyes turned to the Holy One of Israel.
8 They will no longer look to the altars, to the work of their hand,
the sacred pole or the incense stand
which their fingers have made.
9 On that day your cities will be like the cities of the Hivites and the Amorites which they abandoned to the Israelites. All will be desolation.
10 For you have forgotten the God of your salvation,
you have failed to remember the Rock of your refuge.
You may plant the finest plants,
you may plant out imported shoots,
11 you may make them grow
on the day you plant them,
you may make them blossom
on the day you sow,
yet they dwindle and the harvest is gone:
then you may cry!
The upsurge of nations
12 Oh, the rage of many peoples –
they rage like the raging sea!
Oh, the thunder of many nations –
they thunder like the thundering of mighty waves!
13 But God rebukes them,
and they flee far away,
swept away like chaff
on the hills before the wind,
whirled away like eddying dust
before the thunderstorm.
14 At eventide they sow terror;
before morning they are no more.
Such is the portion of our despoilers,
such is the lot of our plunderers.
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Comments Isaiah, Chapter 17
• 17.1 Despite its title this poem should not have been placed among the prophecies against the nations. It is a warning to the King dom of Israel to the north. Verses 10-11 surely allude to the cult of the god Adonis whose death and return to life were symbols of the return of vegetation. It would seem that for his feasts people cultivated earliest and fast-growing plants which appeared and soon withered: in this way people celebrated their mourning for Adonis. The prophet sees there an image of what idols produce in the life of Israel.