Key Verse Spotlight
Isaiah 27:2 — Meaning and Application
Understand how this verse speaks to what you're facing—and how to apply it today
King James Version
" In that day sing ye unto her, A vineyard of red wine. "
Isaiah 27:2
What does Isaiah 27:2 mean?
Isaiah 27:2 uses the picture of a vineyard full of rich red grapes to show God joyfully caring for His people. It means a time is coming when God restores and protects them. For someone today, it’s a promise that God can turn dry, painful seasons into a fruitful, hopeful future.
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Verse in Context
Understanding the surrounding verses prevents misinterpretation:
In that day the LORD with his sore and great and strong sword shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan that crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea.
In that day sing ye unto her, A vineyard of red wine.
I the LORD do keep it; I will water it every moment: lest any hurt it, I will keep it night and day.
Fury is not in me: who would set the briers and thorns against me in battle? I would go through them, I would burn them together.
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“In that day sing ye unto her, A vineyard of red wine.” There’s so much tenderness hidden in this short verse. God is picturing His people—you—like a cherished vineyard, and He calls others to sing over you. Not to criticize you. Not to list your failures. To sing. Maybe lately you’ve felt more like a dried-up field than a fruitful vineyard. Maybe you look at your life and see losses, regrets, or long stretches of silence from God. Yet here, God speaks of a day when your story is not sorrow, but song; not barrenness, but rich, red wine—symbol of joy, abundance, and celebration. Notice that the vineyard doesn’t sing about itself. The song is *for* her. When you feel too tired, too broken, or too ashamed to praise, God is not asking you to perform; He is surrounding you with His own melody of love and protection. You are not an abandoned plot of land. You are tended, watched over, and deeply valued. Even if you can’t feel it right now, God is already holding a future for you where your present pain is not the final word, and His song of delight gently drowns out your sorrow.
Isaiah 27:2: “In that day sing ye unto her, A vineyard of red wine.” Notice first the shift in tone. Earlier in Isaiah, Israel is pictured as an unfruitful vineyard under judgment (Isaiah 5:1–7). Here, “in that day” — a prophetic phrase pointing to God’s future saving work — the vineyard is no longer barren and rejected, but fruitful and celebrated. “Vineyard of red wine” (literally “wine of delight” or “choicest wine”) signals abundance, quality, and joy. This is covenant restoration language: God is not merely tolerating His people; He is delighting in them, taking pleasure in the fruit He Himself produces in them. The command “sing” indicates that this transformation demands worship, not mere analysis. From a theological standpoint, this verse anticipates the redeemed community under God’s careful, constant care (unfolded in vv. 3–6). In Christ, this finds its fullest expression: the once wayward vineyard becomes a Spirit-filled people bearing “fruit that remains” (John 15). For you, this means your story in Christ is not defined by former barrenness. God envisions you as part of His cherished, fruitful vineyard—a life meant to be guarded by Him, enriched by Him, and ultimately a cause for song.
Isaiah 27:2 pictures God saying, “In that day sing… A vineyard of red wine.” That vineyard is God’s people—fruitful, healthy, worth celebrating. Here’s what this means for your actual life: God is not aiming just to keep you barely surviving. He wants you *fruitful*—in your marriage, your parenting, your work, your character. Red wine is the result of a long process: planting, pruning, waiting, crushing, and then refining. The same is true for you. So when God prunes—removes unhelpful relationships, challenges your habits, or exposes your attitudes—He’s not trying to ruin you; He’s protecting the vineyard. When life feels like crushing pressure, ask, “What kind of fruit is God trying to produce in me through this—patience, self-control, faithfulness?” Practically: - In conflict: let God “prune” your pride; answer gently instead of defending yourself. - In work: be diligent and honest even when unseen; that’s how character ferments into “red wine.” - In family: water your vineyard daily with small acts of love, not just big emotional moments. God’s goal is that your life becomes something He can sing over—rich, mature, and full of His fruit.
“In that day sing ye unto her, A vineyard of red wine.” This is not merely a poetic image; it is a glimpse into your eternal identity in God’s heart. The “vineyard of red wine” is a people fully ripened in love—costly, fruitful, and saturated with the life of God. Red wine in Scripture often whispers of blood, of sacrifice, of covenant. Behind this vineyard stands the Lamb whose blood has turned barren soil into sacred ground. You may see yourself as dry, inconsistent, easily withered. God sees what you will be “in that day”: a vineyard worth singing over. Notice: heaven is not analyzing, it is singing. The divine gaze upon the redeemed is not cold evaluation but delighted celebration. Let this verse call you into a different way of living now. Yield to the Vinedresser’s pruning, for He is shaping you into a life that overflows with joy, intercession, and sacrificial love. Ask Him: “Make my life a vineyard You can sing over.” Your failures are not the final word. The song of God over His people is. Live today in light of that coming song.
Restorative & Mental Health Application
Isaiah 27:2 pictures God’s people as “a vineyard of red wine”—carefully tended, valued, and fruitful. For those facing anxiety, depression, or trauma, you may feel more like an abandoned field than a cherished vineyard. This verse invites a different narrative: you are not a problem to be fixed, but a life to be gently cultivated.
Emotionally, “singing over the vineyard” reflects affirmation and compassion. In clinical terms, this aligns with self-compassion and corrective emotional experiences—replacing harsh inner criticism with kinder, more truthful voices. When depressive thoughts say, “I’m worthless,” this image invites you to ask: “If God sees me as a vineyard worth singing over, how might I speak to myself differently today?”
Practical strategies:
- Journaling: Write one way you feel barren, then one way God might be nurturing you in that area.
- Grounding: When anxiety surges, slow your breathing and picture God walking through a vineyard, carefully tending each vine—pruning, watering, protecting.
- Boundaries: Healthy vineyards are fenced. Identify one boundary you need to set to protect your mental health.
This verse does not erase pain, but it reframes your identity: not forgotten, but carefully tended in the midst of it.
Common Misapplications to Avoid
Some misapply this verse by treating “singing” over the vineyard as a command to stay cheerful no matter what, pressuring themselves or others to hide grief, trauma, or abuse. Others read “red wine” as license to cope with distress through alcohol or other substances instead of seeking help. It can also be twisted to suggest that spiritual devotion alone will “sweeten” a harmful marriage, family system, or church, discouraging people from setting boundaries or leaving dangerous situations. Professional mental health support is needed if you feel unsafe, hopeless, trapped, or are using faith language to minimize serious symptoms (e.g., suicidal thoughts, self-harm, addiction, domestic violence). Beware messages that label honest emotions as “unspiritual,” promise that prayer will replace therapy or medication, or insist you “just praise through it” instead of accessing crisis lines, licensed care, and legal or medical protection when needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Isaiah 27:2 mean by “A vineyard of red wine”?
Why is Isaiah 27:2 important for Christians today?
How can I apply Isaiah 27:2 to my daily life?
What is the context of Isaiah 27:2 in the book of Isaiah?
Is Isaiah 27:2 connected to Jesus’ teaching about the vine and branches?
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From This Chapter
Isaiah 27:1
"In that day the LORD with his sore and great and strong sword shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan that crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea."
Isaiah 27:3
"I the LORD do keep it; I will water it every moment: lest any hurt it, I will keep it night and day."
Isaiah 27:4
"Fury is not in me: who would set the briers and thorns against me in battle? I would go through them, I would burn them together."
Isaiah 27:5
"Or let him take hold of my strength, that he may make peace with me; and he shall make peace"
Isaiah 27:6
"He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root: Israel shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit."
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