This section of the text has similarities to the preceding oracles against the nations (chs. 13-23), but it is also different in certain respects. It is a third cycle, but not a cycle of oracles.221The content integrates with the oracles, but chapters 24-27 are one continuous whole. It is similar to the finale of a great piece of music; it is climactic but can be appreciated by itself.
Chapters 24-27 also parallel chapters 1-4 in that both sections contain messages of sin, judgment, and restoration "in that day."Likewise 27:2-6 is another song about a vineyard (cf. 5:1-7). Chapters 28-33 contain six woes, like 5:8-30. Chapter 34 assures divine judgment on Gentile oppressors (cf. ch. 10), and chapter 35 promises kingdom blessings for Israel (cf. chs. 11-12).222
The theme of this section is the triumph of God over His enemies for His people. Isaiah developed this theme by picturing the destruction of one "city"("the city of chaos"[v. 10], the city of man, really the whole world) and the establishment of another city (Mount Zion, Jerusalem, the city of God). These two "cities"are the focal points of the judgment and restoration that Isaiah alluded to in the preceding oracles. As the city of man falls under divine judgment, the songs of God-neglecting man disappear; and as the city of God appears, the songs of the redeemed swell.
"The prophet wants to make it plain that God is sovereign actor on the stage of history. It is not he who reacts to the nations, but the nations who respond to him. Thus Israel's [and all God's people's] hope is not in the nations of humanity. They will wither away in a moment under God's blast. Rather, her hope is in the Lord, who is the master of the nations."223
Temporally, the first five oracles had strong connections to Isaiah's own times, and the second five reached farther into the future.224This section stretches even farther into the future and is mainly eschatological.225These are prophecies regarding the eschatological day of the Lord. Later scriptural revelation enables us to locate these judgments more specifically in the Tribulation, at the return of Christ, in the Millennium, and at the very end of human history on this earth.
The original settings of the prophecies that make up this section are even more difficult to nail down than those in the foregoing oracles. Chapters 24-27 develop the calls expressed in 2:2-4 and 5: calls to the nations and to God's people to come to Jerusalem, the magnet of the earth in the future. The structure of the passage is chiastic also centering on Mount Zion (25:6-12).
AThe Lord's harvest from a destroyed world (24:1-13: destruction, 1-12; gleanings, 13)
BThe song of the world remnant (24:14-16a)
CThe sinful world overthrown (24:16b-20)
DThe waiting world (24:21-23)
EThe song of the ruined city (25:1-5)
FMount Zion (25:6-12)
E'The song of the strong city (26:1-6)
D'The waiting people of God (26:7-21)
C'Spiritual forces of evil overthrown (27:1)
B'The song of the remnant of the people (27:2-6)
A'The Lord's harvest from a destroyed people (27:7-13: destruction, 7-11; gleanings, 12-13)226
There is chronological progression in this eschatological section from the Tribulation (24:1-20) to the Second Coming (24:21-23) to the Millennium (chs. 25-27). The millennial sections explain various aspects of God's activity during this time.