42:7 to open blind eyes, 1
to release prisoners 2 from dungeons,
those who live in darkness from prisons.
42:13 The Lord emerges like a hero,
like a warrior he inspires himself for battle; 3
he shouts, yes, he yells,
he shows his enemies his power. 4
42:14 “I have been inactive 5 for a long time;
I kept quiet and held back.
Like a woman in labor I groan;
I pant and gasp. 6
42:15 I will make the trees on the mountains and hills wither up; 7
I will dry up all their vegetation.
I will turn streams into islands, 8
and dry up pools of water. 9
42:16 I will lead the blind along an unfamiliar way; 10
I will guide them down paths they have never traveled. 11
I will turn the darkness in front of them into light,
and level out the rough ground. 12
This is what I will do for them.
I will not abandon them.
1 sn This does not refer to literal physical healing of the blind. As the next two lines suggest, this refers metonymically to freeing captives from their dark prisons where their eyes have grown unaccustomed to light.
2 sn This does not refer to hardened, dangerous criminals, who would have been executed for their crimes in ancient Near Eastern society. This verse refers to political prisoners or victims of social injustice.
3 tn Heb “like a man of war he stirs up zeal” (NIV similar).
4 tn Or perhaps, “he triumphs over his enemies” (cf. NIV); NLT “will crush all his enemies.”
5 tn Heb “silent” (so NASB, NIV, TEV, NLT); CEV “have held my temper.”
6 sn The imagery depicts the Lord as a warrior who is eager to fight and can no longer hold himself back from the attack.
7 tn Heb “I will dry up the mountains and hills.” The “mountains and hills” stand by synecdoche for the trees that grow on them. Some prefer to derive the verb from a homonymic root and translate, “I will lay waste.”
8 tc The Hebrew text reads, “I will turn streams into coastlands [or “islands”].” Scholars who believe that this reading makes little sense have proposed an emendation of אִיִּים (’iyyim, “islands”) to צִיּוֹת (tsiyyot, “dry places”; cf. NCV, NLT, TEV). However, since all the versions support the MT reading, there is insufficient grounds for an emendation here. Although the imagery of changing rivers into islands is somewhat strange, J. N. Oswalt describes this imagery against the backdrop of rivers of the Near East. The receding of these rivers at times occasioned the appearance of previously submerged islands (Isaiah [NICOT], 2:126).
9 sn The imagery of this verse, which depicts the Lord bringing a curse of infertility to the earth, metaphorically describes how the Lord will destroy his enemies.
10 tn Heb “a way they do not know” (so NASB); NRSV “a road they do not know.”
11 tn Heb “in paths they do not know I will make them walk.”
12 tn Heb “and the rough ground into a level place.”