
40 Minutes In The Old Testament Isaiah 63:1-19 (Episode 504)
Apr 10, 2026
A vivid unpacking of the winepress imagery and crimson garments that signal divine vengeance and salvation. They trace echoes between Isaiah and Revelation and link the messenger figure to Christ. The conversation moves from fierce judgment to God’s steadfast love, Moses remembered, and Israel’s raw, challenging prayers for renewed compassion.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
God As One-Man Warrior In The Winepress
- Isaiah uses the winepress image to show God as a one-man warrior who accomplishes both judgment and salvation.
- God returns from treading the winepress with enemy blood on his garments, linking divine vengeance to the rescue of the oppressed.
Why Isaiah Names Edom For The Coming Victor
- Edom functions as an emblematic enemy standing for close kin who oppose Israel, not merely a historical nation.
- Chad Bird links the pun on 'Edom' (red) to the garments stained red, tying wordplay to prophetic symbolism.
Hymns That Echo Isaiah's Winepress
- Daniel and Chad both recall hymns and songs that riff on Isaiah 63, like Thomas Kelly's hymn and the Battle Hymn of the Republic.
- Chad reads Kelly's stanzas and links the 'grapes of wrath' and Revelation winepress imagery to Isaiah's scene.



