Isaiah 60:1
Arise, shine; for your light has come, and Yahweh's glory has risen on you!
Interpretation
The prophet calls a arise and shine that is embodied in solitude and community. Isaiah 60:1: trace "has" and "arise". Give arise and shine through how disagreements are handled—teach the body new reflexes.
Context
The setting is Isaiah—prophetic oracle, naming arise and shine. Placed in ch. 60, the nearby lines set its tone. There’s a line into prophetic hope & judgment. The nearby sentences supply the texture.
Manuscripts & Textual Witnesses
In the Masoretic tradition the Hebrew text is preserved, standardized between the 6th–10th centuries CE. The Dead Sea Scrolls (1947-1956 discoveries) provide manuscripts 1000+ years older than medieval texts, generally confirming the Masoretic Text's reliability with only minor variations. The Septuagint (Greek translation, 3rd-2nd century BCE) offers an independent textual witness. Variations between manuscripts are typically minor: spelling differences, word order, or clarifications that do not change the overall sense. Modern translations compare all available manuscripts to reconstruct the best reflects the earliest recoverable text text.
Sources & witness notes
MT