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Isaiah 5

The Song of the Vineyard and the Woes Against Covenant Corruption

Isaiah 5 declares that the Lord’s carefully cultivated vineyard has produced corrupt fruit, so He will remove its protection, pronounce woes over its sins, and summon judgment against those who rejected His word.

Chapter Summary

Isaiah 5 declares that the Lord’s carefully cultivated vineyard has produced corrupt fruit, so He will remove its protection, pronounce woes over its sins, and summon judgment against those who rejected His word.

Overview

The Lord is righteous to judge Judah because He cultivated His people for justice and righteousness, yet they produced bloodshed, oppression, moral corruption, and rejection of His word. Judgment removes the protection of a vineyard that refuses its purpose.

Context
Author

Isaiah son of Amoz

Audience

Judah and Jerusalem, especially leaders, landholders, pleasure-seekers, moral corrupters, self-justifying sinners, and those who reject the Lord’s instruction

Setting

Isaiah 5 follows the restoration hope of Isaiah 4 by returning to indictment. The chapter uses a vineyard song to expose Judah’s covenant failure: the Lord carefully cultivated His vineyard, but it produced only bad fruit. The remainder of the chapter expands that image through a series of woes and a final announcement of coming judgment.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from the beloved’s vineyard song, to the Lord’s interpretation of Judah as the failed vineyard, to six woes exposing the vineyard’s bad fruit, to the rejection of the Lord’s instruction, and finally to the summoned instrument of judgment.

Covenant Significance

Isaiah 5 presents Judah as the Lord’s covenant vineyard. The Lord’s careful cultivation corresponds to covenant privilege and responsibility. The expected fruit is justice and righteousness, but the actual fruit is bloodshed, distress, greed, moral corruption, and rejected instruction. Covenant judgment therefore comes as the removal of protection and the arrival of a summoned foreign power.

Gospel Clarity

Isaiah 5 shows that God’s people have failed to produce the fruit of justice and righteousness despite receiving His care, instruction, and protection. The bad fruit of sin includes greed, indulgence, moral inversion, corrupt judgment, and rejection of the Lord’s word. Therefore judgment is just.

Focus Points

  • Covenant Fruitfulness
  • Divine Justice
  • Social Injustice
  • Pleasure Without Regard for God
  • Moral Inversion
  • Rejected Revelation
  • The Holiness of God
  • Sovereignty Over Nations
  • Covenant Accountability
  • Human Sin
  • Revelation Rejected
  • Holiness of God
  • Judgment
  • Justice and Righteousness
  • Moral Order

Passages

Book Arc