What it means
Picture it: a stretch of cracked, sun-blasted desert — nothing but rocks and scrub. Then God speaks, and where there was sand, suddenly there's a forest. Not just any forest — seven different trees, named one by one, planted by God himself.
What's plainly on the page: God says "I will plant" and "I will set." Twice. He's not asking the desert to bloom; he's doing it himself. And he names seven specific trees — cedar, acacia, myrtle, olive, cypress, elm, boxwood. Seven is the Bible's number for fullness, completion. This isn't a sparse little patch of green. This is overflow.
What's easy to miss: these trees don't naturally grow together. The cedar belongs on the mountains of Lebanon. The acacia thrives in dry valleys. The olive needs cultivated hillsides. The myrtle wants moisture. God is stacking together species that have no business sharing soil — and putting them all in the wilderness. The point isn't horticulture; it's impossibility. He's showing off.
This verse sits inside a larger speech (Isaiah 41:8–20) where God is comforting his people who feel small, afraid, and abandoned. Verses 17–18 talk about the poor and needy looking for water and finding none — until God opens rivers in bare places. Verse 19 is the next beat: not just water, but a whole flourishing ecosystem. Verse 20 tells us why: "so that they may see and know… that the hand of the LORD has done this."
Christians have read this two main ways and they don't really conflict. One: it's about Israel coming home from Babylon — the land itself revived. Two (especially in the church fathers and reformers): it's a picture of what God does in dead souls, planting his life where there was nothing. Isaiah 55:13 and 61:3 push us toward both readings at once.
Historical Context
Isaiah 40–55 speaks into one of the darkest moments in Israel's story: the Babylonian exile. In 586 BC, the armies of King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon broke through Jerusalem's walls, burned the temple to the ground, and dragged the survivors a thousand miles east to live as deportees in a foreign empire. Imagine your city flattened, your church torched, your family marched off in chains to a country whose gods you don't worship and whose language you don't speak. That's the audience here.
By the time these chapters land — somewhere between 550 and 539 BC, as the Persian king Cyrus is rising and Babylon is starting to wobble — the exiles have been stuck for decades. A whole generation has grown up never seeing Jerusalem. The land of Israel itself, back home, is wilderness: terraced farms gone wild, vineyards choked, towns abandoned.
So when God says, "I will plant cedars in the wilderness," the picture isn't abstract poetry. It's their wilderness. The ruins they left. The fields nobody's plowed in fifty years. And the cedar — that's the famous tree of Lebanon, the wood Solomon used for the temple. Mentioning cedar to an exile is like mentioning marble columns to someone whose cathedral was bulldozed. It says: the glory is coming back, and bigger than before.
The seven trees themselves would have hit different nerves. Acacia was the wood of the tabernacle (Exodus 25). Olive meant oil for anointing kings and priests. Myrtle was used at the Feast of Booths to celebrate God's care in the wilderness years. God is naming the trees of worship, kingship, and celebration — and planting them where there's only dust.
Original Language
A few words worth slowing down on:
- מִדְבָּר (midbar) — "wilderness." Not just sandy desert. It's the uncultivated, untamed place. The place where Israel wandered forty years. The place of testing, hunger, and — surprisingly often in the Bible — encounter with God. When God says he'll plant here, he's choosing the very ground that symbolizes barrenness and trial.
- עֲרָבָה (aravah) — "desert" in the second half of the verse. This is the deep dry rift valley, the harshest land Israel knew. Pairing midbar and aravah is like saying "in the badlands and the death valley." Nothing should grow there.
- אֶתֵּן (etten) and אָשִׂים (asim) — "I will give/plant" and "I will set/place." Both verbs are God's hands-on action. He's not just permitting growth; he's the gardener with dirt under his fingernails.
- אֶרֶז (erez) — "cedar." The royal tree. Strong, tall, fragrant, used in the temple. Symbol of majesty.
- הֲדַס (hadas) — "myrtle." Small, fragrant, evergreen. The name of Queen Esther (Hadassah) comes from this word. Humble but sweet — God plants the small alongside the grand.
Seven trees, seven Hebrew names, hammered out one after another. The piling-up is the point: God's restoration is generous.
Application
Look at the verse again. God plants forests in deserts.
Now look at your life. Where's your wilderness? Be specific. The marriage that's gone cold. The faith that feels like dry bones. The addiction you keep crawling back to. The prayer life that's mostly silence. The career that's eating you alive. The grief that hasn't lifted in two years.
Here's what this verse won't let you do: it won't let you keep telling yourself God only works with the soil that's already fertile. The whole point is that he plants where nothing grows. He plants cedars — cedars, the temple trees — in cracked dirt. He doesn't wait for you to clean up the wilderness before he comes. The wilderness is his planting ground.
But here's the cost. To believe this verse, you have to stop managing your barren places yourself. You have to stop the frantic activity of trying to grow your own cedars by sheer will. You have to actually let God touch the part of your life you've roped off because you've decided it's beyond hope. That spot. The one that came to mind just now. He wants in there.
And the planting won't look like you expect. Notice God plants seven different trees. Not a tidy row of one species. The flourishing he brings to your life will be unruly, full of variety, not the neat monoculture you've been planning. Cedar next to acacia next to boxwood. Strength next to humility next to small daily beauty. Let him plant what he wants to plant.
Then verse 20: "so that they may see and know that the hand of the LORD has done this." The whole reason for the forest is so you — and the people watching you — will know it was him. Not your discipline. Not your hustle. Him.
Prayer Points
- Lord, the dry place in me right now is ____. I stop pretending I can grow anything there myself. Come plant what you want to plant.
- Father, I confess I've believed some parts of my life are beyond your reach. Forgive me. Teach me to expect cedars in my wilderness.
- God, when you bring new life, let it be obvious it was you — not my striving, not my image management — so others will see your hand and know you.
- Lord, give me patience for the planting season. Help me not to dig up the seeds to check if they're growing.
- Jesus, thank you that you are the one who turns deserts into gardens. I trust you with the barren ground.
Reflections
- What specific wilderness in my life have I quietly decided is permanent? What would change if I actually believed God intends to plant a forest there?
- Am I trying to grow my own cedars — manufacturing spiritual fruit, manufacturing healing — instead of letting God do the planting?
- Where in my life have I already seen God grow something unlikely? Have I told anyone, or do I take credit for it?
- The trees in this verse don't naturally grow together. Where am I demanding my flourishing look a certain tidy way, instead of letting God plant whatever variety he chooses?
- If verse 20 is true — that the point of the forest is so people see and know it was God — am I living in a way that points to him, or in a way that makes me look impressive?
Sources
- Adam Clarke Bible Commentary — Ishmael executes his conspiracy against Gedaliah the governor and his companions, and attempts to carry away the Jews who were with him captives to the Ammonites, Jer 41:1-10; but Johanan recovers the
- Jamieson-Fausset-Brown — (Isa 32:15; Isa 55:13). shittah--rather, the "acacia," or Egyptian thorn, from which the gum Arabic is obtained [LOWTH]. oil tree--the olive. fir tree--rather, the "cypress": grateful by its shade. pi
- John Gill Bible Commentary — I will plant in the wilderness the cedar, the shittah tree,.... Where such trees had not used to grow, but in Lebanon, and such like places. The "shittah tree" is thought to be a kind of cedar; it is
- Matthew Henry Bible Commentary — This chapter, as the former, in intended both for the conviction of idolaters and for the consolation of all God's faithful worshippers; for the Spirit is sent, and ministers are employed by him, both