Isaiah 66

The Lord Judges the Nations

1 The Lord says, “Heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool. What kind of house, then, could you build for me, what kind of place for me to live in?

2 I myself created the whole universe! I am pleased with those who are humble and repentant, who fear me and obey me.

3 “The people do as they please. It’s all the same to them whether they kill a bull as a sacrifice or sacrifice a human being; whether they sacrifice a lamb or break a dog’s neck; whether they present a grain offering or offer pigs’ blood; whether they offer incense or pray to an idol. They take pleasure in disgusting ways of worship.

4 So I will bring disaster upon them—the very things they are afraid of—because no one answered when I called or listened when I spoke. They chose to disobey me and do evil.”

5 Listen to what the Lord says, you that fear him and obey him: “Because you are faithful to me, some of your own people hate you and will have nothing to do with you. They mock you and say, ‘Let the Lord show his greatness and save you, so that we may see you rejoice.’ But they themselves will be disgraced!

6 Listen! That loud noise in the city, that sound in the Temple, is the sound of the Lord punishing his enemies!

7 “My holy city is like a woman who suddenly gives birth to a child without ever going into labor.

8 Has anyone ever seen or heard of such a thing? Has a nation ever been born in a day? Zion will not have to suffer long, before the nation is born.

9 Do not think that I will bring my people to the point of birth and not let them be born.” The Lord has spoken.

10 Rejoice with Jerusalem; be glad for her,

all you that love this city!

Rejoice with her now,

all you that have mourned for her!

11 You will enjoy her prosperity,

like a child at its mother’s breast.

12 The Lord says, “I will bring you lasting prosperity; the wealth of the nations will flow to you like a river that never goes dry. You will be like a child that is nursed by its mother, carried in her arms, and treated with love.

13 I will comfort you in Jerusalem, as a mother comforts her child.

14 When you see this happen, you will be glad; it will make you strong and healthy. Then you will know that I, the Lord, help those who obey me, and I show my anger against my enemies.”

15 The Lord will come with fire. He will ride on the wings of a storm to punish those he is angry with.

16 By fire and sword he will punish all the people of the world whom he finds guilty—and many will be put to death.

17 The Lord says, “The end is near for those who purify themselves for pagan worship, who go in procession to sacred gardens,and who eat pork and mice and other disgusting foods.

18 I knowtheir thoughts and their deeds. I am comingto gather the people of all the nations. When they come together, they will see what my power can do

19 and will know that I am the one who punishes them.

“But I will spare some of them and send them to the nations and the distant lands that have not heard of my fame or seen my greatness and power: to Spain, Libya,and Lydia, with its skilled archers, and to Tubal and Greece. Among these nations they will proclaim my greatness.

20 They will bring back all your people from the nations as a gift to me. They will bring them to my sacred hillin Jerusalem on horses, mules, and camels, and in chariots and wagons, just as Israelites bring grain offerings to the Temple in ritually clean containers.

21 I will make some of them priests and Levites.

22 “Just as the new earth and the new heavens will endure by my power, so your descendants and your name will endure.

23 On every New Moon Festival and every Sabbath people of every nation will come to worship me here in Jerusalem,” says the Lord.

24 “As they leave, they will see the dead bodies of those who have rebelled against me. The worms that eat them will never die, and the fire that burns them will never be put out. The sight of them will be disgusting to all people.”

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Song of Songs 1

1 The most beautiful of songs, by Solomon.

The First Song

2 Your lips cover me with kisses;

your love is better than wine.

3 There is a fragrance about you;

the sound of your name recalls it.

No woman could keep from loving you.

4 Take me with you, and we’ll run away;

be my king and take me to your room.

We will be happy together,

drink deep, and lose ourselves in love.

No wonder all women love you!

5 Women of Jerusalem, I am dark butbeautiful,

dark as the desert tents of Kedar,

but beautiful as the draperies in Solomon’s palace.

6 Don’t look down on me because of my color,

because the sun has tanned me.

My brothers were angry with me

and made me work in the vineyard.

I had no time to care for myself.

7 Tell me, my love,

Where will you lead your flock to graze?

Where will they rest from the noonday sun?

Why should I need to look for you

among the flocks of the other shepherds?

8 Don’t you know the place, loveliest of women?

Go and follow the flock;

find pasture for your goats

near the tents of the shepherds.

9 You, my love, excite men

as a mare excites the stallions of Pharaoh’s chariots.

10 Your hair is beautiful upon your cheeks

and falls along your neck like jewels.

11 But we will make for you a chain of gold

with ornaments of silver.

12 My king was lying on his couch,

and my perfume filled the air with fragrance.

13 My lover has the scent of myrrh

as he lies upon my breasts.

14 My lover is like the wild flowers

that bloom in the vineyards at Engedi.

15 How beautiful you are, my love;

how your eyes shine with love!

16 How handsome you are, my dearest;

how you delight me!

The green grass will be our bed;

17 the cedars will be the beams of our house,

and the cypress trees the ceiling.

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Song of Songs 2

1 I am only a wild flower in Sharon,

a lily in a mountain valley.

2 Like a lily among thorns

is my darling among women.

3 Like an apple tree among the trees of the forest,

so is my dearest compared to other men.

I love to sit in its shadow,

and its fruit is sweet to my taste.

4 He brought me to his banquet hall

and raised the banner of love over me.

5 Restore my strength with raisins

and refresh me with apples!

I am weak from passion.

6 His left hand is under my head,

and his right hand caresses me.

7 Promise me, women of Jerusalem;

swear by the swift deer and the gazelles

that you will not interrupt our love.

The Second Song

8 I hear my lover’s voice.

He comes running over the mountains,

racing across the hills to me.

9 My lover is like a gazelle,

like a young stag.

There he stands beside the wall.

He looks in through the window

and glances through the lattice.

10 My lover speaks to me.

Come then, my love;

my darling, come with me.

11 The winter is over; the rains have stopped;

12 in the countryside the flowers are in bloom.

This is the time for singing;

the song of doves is heard in the fields.

13 Figs are beginning to ripen;

the air is fragrant with blossoming vines.

Come then, my love;

my darling, come with me.

14 You are like a dove that hides

in the crevice of a rock.

Let me see your lovely face

and hear your enchanting voice.

15 Catch the foxes, the little foxes,

before they ruin our vineyard in bloom.

16 My lover is mine, and I am his.

He feeds his flock among the lilies

17 until the morning breezes blow

and the darkness disappears.

Return, my darling, like a gazelle,

like a stag on the mountains of Bether.

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Song of Songs 3

1 Asleep on my bed, night after night

I dreamed of the one I love;

I was looking for him, but couldn’t find him.

2 I went wandering through the city,

through its streets and alleys.

I looked for the one I love.

I looked, but couldn’t find him.

3 The sentries patrolling the city saw me.

I asked them, “Have you found my lover?”

4 As soon as I left them, I found him.

I held him and wouldn’t let him go

until I took him to my mother’s house,

to the room where I was born.

5 Promise me, women of Jerusalem;

swear by the swift deer and the gazelles

that you will not interrupt our love.

The Third Song

6 What is this coming from the desert like a column of smoke,

fragrant with incense and myrrh,

the incense sold by the traders?

7 Solomon is coming, carried on his throne;

sixty soldiers form the bodyguard,

the finest soldiers in Israel.

8 All of them are skillful with the sword;

they are battle-hardened veterans.

Each of them is armed with a sword,

on guard against a night attack.

9 King Solomon is carried on a throne

made of the finest wood.

10 Its posts are covered with silver;

over it is cloth embroidered with gold.

Its cushions are covered with purple cloth,

lovingly woven by the women of Jerusalem.

11 Women of Zion, come and see King Solomon.

He is wearing the crown that his mother placed on his head

on his wedding day,

on the day of his gladness and joy.

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Song of Songs 4

1 How beautiful you are, my love!

How your eyes shine with love behind your veil.

Your hair dances like a flock of goats

bounding down the hills of Gilead.

2 Your teeth are as white as sheep

that have just been shorn and washed.

Not one of them is missing;

they are all perfectly matched.

3 Your lips are like a scarlet ribbon;

how lovely they are when you speak.

Your cheeks glow behind your veil.

4 Your neck is like the tower of David,

round and smooth,

with a necklace like a thousand shields hung around it.

5 Your breasts are like gazelles,

twin deer feeding among lilies.

6 I will stay on the hill of myrrh,

the hill of incense,

until the morning breezes blow

and the darkness disappears.

7 How beautiful you are, my love;

how perfect you are!

8 Come with me from the Lebanon Mountains, my bride;

come with me from Lebanon.

Come down from the top of Mount Amana,

from Mount Senir and Mount Hermon,

where the lions and leopards live.

9 The look in your eyes, my sweetheart and bride,

and the necklace you are wearing

have stolen my heart.

10 Your love delights me,

my sweetheart and bride.

Your love is better than wine;

your perfume more fragrant than any spice.

11 The taste of honey is on your lips, my darling;

your tongue is milk and honey for me.

Your clothing has all the fragrance of Lebanon.

12 My sweetheart, my bride, is a secret garden,

a walled garden, a private spring;

13 there the plants flourish.

They grow like an orchard of pomegranate trees

and bear the finest fruits.

There is no lack of henna and nard,

14 of saffron, calamus, and cinnamon,

or incense of every kind.

Myrrh and aloes grow there

with all the most fragrant perfumes.

15 Fountains water the garden,

streams of flowing water,

brooks gushing down from the Lebanon Mountains.

16 Wake up, North Wind.

South Wind, blow on my garden;

fill the air with fragrance.

Let my lover come to his garden

and eat the best of its fruits.

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Song of Songs 5

1 I have entered my garden,

my sweetheart, my bride.

I am gathering my spices and myrrh;

I am eating my honey and honeycomb;

I am drinking my wine and milk.

Eat, lovers, and drink

until you are drunk with love!

The Fourth Song

2 While I slept, my heart was awake.

I dreamed my lover knocked at the door.

Let me come in, my darling,

my sweetheart, my dove.

My head is wet with dew,

and my hair is damp from the mist.

3 I have already undressed;

why should I get dressed again?

I have washed my feet;

why should I get them dirty again?

4 My lover put his hand to the door,

and I was thrilled that he was near.

5 I was ready to let him come in.

My hands were covered with myrrh,

my fingers with liquid myrrh,

as I grasped the handle of the door.

6 I opened the door for my lover,

but he had already gone.

How I wanted to hear his voice!

I looked for him, but couldn’t find him;

I called to him, but heard no answer.

7 The sentries patrolling the city found me;

they struck me and bruised me;

the guards at the city wall tore off my cape.

8 Promise me, women of Jerusalem,

that if you find my lover,

you will tell him I am weak from passion.

9 Most beautiful of women,

is your lover different from everyone else?

What is there so wonderful about him

that we should give you our promise?

10 My lover is handsome and strong;

he is one in ten thousand.

11 His face is bronzed and smooth;

his hair is wavy,

black as a raven.

12 His eyes are as beautiful as doves by a flowing brook,

doves washed in milk and standing by the stream.

13 His cheeks are as lovely as a garden

that is full of herbs and spices.

His lips are like lilies,

wet with liquid myrrh.

14 His hands are well-formed,

and he wears rings set with gems.

His body is like smooth ivory,

with sapphires set in it.

15 His thighs are columns of alabaster

set in sockets of gold.

He is majestic, like the Lebanon Mountains

with their towering cedars.

16 His mouth is sweet to kiss;

everything about him enchants me.

This is what my lover is like,

women of Jerusalem.

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Song of Songs 6

1 Most beautiful of women,

where has your lover gone?

Tell us which way your lover went,

so that we can help you find him.

2 My lover has gone to his garden,

where the balsam trees grow.

He is feeding his flock in the garden

and gathering lilies.

3 My lover is mine, and I am his;

he feeds his flock among the lilies.

The Fifth Song

4 My love, you are as beautiful as Jerusalem,

as lovely as the city of Tirzah,

as breathtaking as these great cities.

5 Turn your eyes away from me;

they are holding me captive.

Your hair dances like a flock of goats

bounding down the hills of Gilead.

6 Your teeth are as white as a flock of sheep

that have just been washed.

Not one of them is missing;

they are all perfectly matched.

7 Your cheeks glow behind your veil.

8 Let the king have sixty queens, eighty concubines,

young women without number!

9 But I love only one,

and she is as lovely as a dove.

She is her mother’s only daughter,

her mother’s favorite child.

All women look at her and praise her;

queens and concubines sing her praises.

10 Who is this whose glance is like the dawn?

She is beautiful and bright,

as dazzling as the sun or the moon.

11 I have come down among the almond trees

to see the young plants in the valley,

to see the new leaves on the vines

and the blossoms on the pomegranate trees.

12 I am trembling; you have made me as eager for love

as a chariot driver is for battle.

13 Dance, dance,girl of Shulam.

Let us watch you as you dance.

Why do you want to watch me

as I dance between the rows of onlookers?

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Song of Songs 7

1 What a magnificent young woman you are!

How beautiful are your feet in sandals.

The curve of your thighs

is like the work of an artist.

2 A bowl is there,

that never runs out of spiced wine.

A sheaf of wheat is there,

surrounded by lilies.

3 Your breasts are like twin deer,

like two gazelles.

4 Your neck is like a tower of ivory.

Your eyes are like the pools in the city of Heshbon,

near the gate of that great city.

Your nose is as lovely as the tower of Lebanon

that stands guard at Damascus.

5 Your head is held high like Mount Carmel.

Your braided hair shines like the finest satin;

its beautycould hold a king captive.

6 How pretty you are, how beautiful;

how complete the delights of your love.

7 You are as graceful as a palm tree,

and your breasts are clusters of dates.

8 I will climb the palm tree

and pick its fruit.

To me your breasts are like bunches of grapes,

your breath like the fragrance of apples,

9 and your mouth like the finest wine.

Then let the wine flow straight to my lover,

flowing over his lips and teeth.

10 I belong to my lover, and he desires me.

11 Come, darling, let’s go out to the countryside

and spend the night in the villages.

12 We will get up early and look at the vines

to see whether they’ve started to grow,

whether the blossoms are opening

and the pomegranate trees are in bloom.

There I will give you my love.

13 You can smell the scent of mandrakes,

and all the pleasant fruits are near our door.

Darling, I have kept for you

the old delights and the new.

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Song of Songs 8

1 I wish that you were my brother,

that my mother had nursed you at her breast.

Then, if I met you in the street,

I could kiss you and no one would mind.

2 I would take you to my mother’s house,

where you could teach me love.

I would give you spiced wine,

my pomegranate wine to drink.

3 Your left hand is under my head,

and your right hand caresses me.

4 Promise me, women of Jerusalem,

that you will not interrupt our love.

The Sixth Song

5 Who is this coming from the desert,

arm in arm with her lover?

Under the apple tree I woke you,

in the place where you were born.

6 Close your heart to every love but mine;

hold no one in your arms but me.

Love is as powerful as death;

passion is as strong as death itself.

It bursts into flame

and burns like a raging fire.

7 Water cannot put it out;

no flood can drown it.

But if any tried to buy love with their wealth,

contempt is all they would get.

8 We have a young sister,

and her breasts are still small.

What will we do for her

when a young man comes courting?

9 If she is a wall,

we will build her a silver tower.

But if she is a gate,

we will protect her with panels of cedar.

10 I am a wall,

and my breasts are its towers.

My lover knows that with him

I find contentment and peace.

11 Solomon has a vineyard

in a place called Baal Hamon.

There are farmers who rent it from him;

each one pays a thousand silver coins.

12 Solomon is welcome to his thousand coins,

and the farmers to two hundred as their share;

I have a vineyard of my own!

13 Let me hear your voice from the garden, my love;

my companions are waiting to hear you speak.

14 Come to me, my lover, like a gazelle,

like a young stag on the mountains where spices grow.

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Ecclesiastes 1

Life Is Useless

1 These are the words of the Philosopher, David’s son, who was king in Jerusalem.

2 It is useless, useless, said the Philosopher. Life is useless, all useless.

3 You spend your life working, laboring, and what do you have to show for it?

4 Generations come and generations go, but the world stays just the same.

5 The sun still rises, and it still goes down, going wearily back to where it must start all over again.

6 The wind blows south, the wind blows north—round and round and back again.

7 Every river flows into the sea, but the sea is not yet full. The water returns to where the rivers began, and starts all over again.

8 Everything leads to weariness—a weariness too great for words. Our eyes can never see enough to be satisfied; our ears can never hear enough.

9 What has happened before will happen again. What has been done before will be done again. There is nothing new in the whole world.

10 “Look,” they say, “here is something new!” But no, it has all happened before, long before we were born.

11 No one remembers what has happened in the past, and no one in days to come will remember what happens between now and then.

The Philosopher’s Experience

12 I, the Philosopher, have been king over Israel in Jerusalem.

13 I determined that I would examine and study all the things that are done in this world.

God has laid a miserable fate upon us.

14 I have seen everything done in this world, and I tell you, it is all useless. It is like chasing the wind.

15 You can’t straighten out what is crooked; you can’t count things that aren’t there.

16 I told myself, “I have become a great man, far wiser than anyone who ruled Jerusalem before me. I know what wisdom and knowledge really are.”

17 I was determined to learn the difference between knowledge and foolishness, wisdom and madness. But I found out that I might as well be chasing the wind.

18 The wiser you are, the more worries you have; the more you know, the more it hurts.

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