CHAPTER 42
The Servant of the Lord
my chosen one with whom I am pleased.
Upon him I have put my spirit;
he shall bring forth justice to the nations.a
nor make his voice heard in the street.
and a dimly burning wick he will not quench.
He will faithfully bring forth justice.
until he establishes justice on the earth;
the coastlands* will wait for his teaching.
who created the heavens and stretched them out,
who spread out the earth and its produce,
Who gives breath to its people
and spirit to those who walk on it:
I have grasped you by the hand;
I formed you, and set you
as a covenant for the people,
a light for the nations,b
to bring out prisoners from confinement,
and from the dungeon, those who live in darkness.
my glory I give to no other,
nor my praise to idols.
new ones I now declare;
Before they spring forth
I announce them to you.
The Lord’s Purpose for Israel
his praise from the ends of the earth:
Let the sea and what fills it resound,
the coastlands, and those who dwell in them.
the villages where Kedar* dwells;
Let the inhabitants of Sela exult,
and shout from the top of the mountains.
and utter his praise in the coastlands.
like a man of war he stirs up his fury;
He shouts out his battle cry,
against his enemies he shows his might:c
I have said nothing, holding myself back;
Now I cry out like a woman in labor,
gasping and panting.
all their undergrowth I will dry up;
I will turn the rivers into marshes,
and the marshes I will dry up.d
by paths they do not know I will guide them.
I will turn darkness into light before them,
and make crooked ways straight.
These are my promises:
I made them, I will not forsake them.e
who trust in idols;
Who say to molten images,
“You are our gods.”
you blind ones, look and see!
or deaf like the messenger I send?
Who is blind like the one I restore,
blind like the servant of the LORD?
ears open, but do not hear.
to make his teaching great and glorious.
all of them trapped in holes,
hidden away in prisons.
They are taken as plunder, with no one to rescue them,
as spoil, with no one to say, “Give back!”
listen and pay attention from now on?
Israel to the plunderers?*
Was it not the LORD, against whom we have sinned?
In his ways they refused to walk,
his teaching they would not heed.
his anger, and the fury of battle;
It blazed all around them, yet they did not realize,
it burned them, but they did not take it to heart.
* [42:1–4] Servant: three other passages have been popularly called “servant of the Lord” poems: 49:1–7; 50:4–11; 52:13–53:12. Whether the servant is an individual or a collectivity is not clear (e.g., contrast 49:3 with 49:5). More important is the description of the mission of the servant. In the early Church and throughout Christian tradition, these poems have been applied to Christ; cf. Mt 12:18–21.
* [42:3] Bruised reed…: images to express the gentle manner of the servant’s mission.
* [42:4] Coastlands: for Israel, the world to the west: the islands and coastal nations of the Mediterranean.
* [42:11] Kedar: cf. note on 21:16. Sela: Petra, the capital of Edom.
* [42:15–16] Active once more, God will remove the obstacles that hinder the exiles’ return, and will lead them by new roads to Jerusalem; cf. 40:3–4.
* [42:18–20] The Lord rebukes his people for their failures, but their role and their mission endure: they remain his servant, his messenger to the nations.
* [42:22] A people: Israel in exile.
* [42:24] Plunderers: the Assyrians and Babylonians. We…they: the switch from first- to third-person speech, though puzzling, does not obscure the fact that “the people” is meant.
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