In Romans 15:12, Paul cites Isaiah 11:
“There will come the shoot of Jesse, the one who arises to rule over the Gentiles. In him the Gentiles will hope.”
By citing Isaiah, Paul identifies Jesus as the promised Davidic descendant through whom the Gentiles will be brought under Messianic rule. The point concerns the restoration of the nations, integral to the work of the church in the Kingdom.
The “Gentiles” refer to survivors from the nations whom the Messiah will rule over in the future kingdom, as envisioned in key prophetic passages like:
- Ezekiel 36:33–37 (where the nations left around a renewed Israel will know the Lord amid restored cities and land like Eden),
- Amos 9:11–12 (raising David’s fallen booth so that the remnant of Edom and all the nations called by God’s name may be possessed),
- Isaiah 66:18–19 (gathering all nations to see God’s glory, with survivors sent as messengers to distant peoples),
- Zechariah 14:16 (everyone who survives of the nations that attacked Jerusalem going up yearly to worship the King at the Feast of Booths),
- And Isaiah 19:16–25 (striking and then healing Egypt and Assyria, former enemies, so they become “My people” alongside Israel as a blessing in the earth).
These texts collectively portray the kingdom age of Messianic reign: after divine judgments, survivors from the nations enter the kingdom will worship the Messiah and live under His righteous rule alongside a restored Israel.
Revelation develops this vision further in chapter 2, verses 26–27. Jesus promises the one who overcomes “authority over the nations,” adding that he “shall rule them with a rod of iron.”
Revelation 12:5 applies the same language to the male child destined “to rule all the nations with a rod of iron.” The nations will be redeemed in the age to come and governed under the authority of the Messiah and his saints.
At the same time, Revelation preserves the supremacy of God. In Revelation 15:3–4, the redeemed address “the Lord God, the All-Powerful” as “King of the nations,” declaring that “all nations will come and worship before You.” The Messiah’s rule over the nations is wholly dependent on God, who remains the ultimate Sovereign, with the Messiah as His appointed ruler together with the church.
The vision reaches its climax in Revelation 21:24:
“The nations will walk by its light, and the kings of the earth will bring their splendor into it.”
The language is drawn from Isaiah 60, where restored Zion becomes the focal point of international pilgrimage and royal tribute. The scene assumes the continued existence of nations, kings, and an earthly Jerusalem in the Kingdom of God. The biblical vision is therefore the restoration of all the nations and their reorganization under the rule of God and His Messiah.
The prophets repeatedly describe these nations as survivors of divine judgment.
Isaiah 2:1–4 and Micah 4:1–4 depict the nations streaming to Zion to receive instruction.
Ezekiel 36:33–37, Amos 9:11–12, Isaiah 66:18–19, and Zechariah 14:16 all point in the same direction: the nations remain distinct yet are brought into submission to the God of Israel.
Isaiah 19:16–25 is especially significant because it extends this restoration to Egypt and Assyria, traditional enemies of Israel. There Yahweh “strikes” Egypt, but also “heals” her. Judgment is not the end point; restoration is.
This pattern is reinforced by the Septuagint rendering of Psalm 47:9. The Hebrew text reads:
“The nobles of the peoples have assembled with the people of the God of Abraham.”
The Septuagint makes the status of the redeemed nations clear:
“The nobles of the nations assemble as the people of the God of Abraham.”
The nations are not merely associated with Israel; they are identified as the people of God alongside the chosen nation of Israel. What emerges is a consistent biblical pattern of reversal: Israel is restored, and the nations, including former enemy nations, are brought into the same covenant promises, blessings, and worship of the one God, Yahweh.
This is the Christian endgame envisioned by the prophets and reaffirmed in the New Testament. The future is not presented as an escape from the earth, but as the establishment of righteous rule on the earth. The nations are not abolished, but healed, restored, and integrated into the kingdom people of God.
Isaiah 60:21 summarizes this well:
“Your people shall all be righteous; they shall possess the land forever, the branch of My planting, the work of My hands, that I may be glorified.”
The final vision is of a restored earth centered in Zion, governed by the Messiah and his saints, and populated by survivors from the nations, all under the one true God, the Father.




