Thursday, July 16, 2026

Mitsrayim • Ashshur • YasharEL: The Three Covenant Stages of the Remnant

 Preface

The Scriptures were not written as isolated books, but as one continuous revelation of Yahuah’s covenant purpose. The Torah establishes the foundation, the Prophets build upon it, and the later writings unfold what was already hidden within the earlier Scriptures. Therefore, no prophecy should be interpreted in a manner that contradicts the Torah, for Yahuah is consistent and does not change.

Throughout the Scriptures, prophetic language often extends beyond its immediate historical setting. Names, places, numbers and events frequently carry covenant significance, inviting the reader to look beyond the literal and discern the spiritual patterns woven throughout the Word. What appears at first to be a geographical reference or historical event may also reveal a deeper prophetic reality.

This study is an attempt to examine those recurring covenant patterns by allowing Scripture to interpret Scripture. Rather than approaching individual passages in isolation, it follows the testimony of the Torah, the Prophets and the Apostolic Writings as one harmonious witness. Particular attention is given to the recurring themes of judgment, refinement, restoration, the remnant, covenant identity and the prophetic use of symbolic language.

The purpose of this study is not to challenge tradition for its own sake, nor to promote speculation, but to encourage careful examination of the Scriptures through the lens of the covenant established by Yahuah. Every conclusion should ultimately be tested by the written Word itself, for the Scriptures remain the highest authority.

May this study encourage every reader to search the Scriptures diligently, comparing passage with passage, so that the harmony of Yahuah’s Word may become increasingly evident and His covenant purpose more clearly understood.


Isa 19:19  In that day a slaughter-place to יהוה shall be in the midst of the land of Mitsrayim, and a standing column to יהוה at its border.

Isa 19:20  And it shall be for a sign and for a witness to יהוה of hosts in the land of Mitsrayim. When they cry to יהוה because of the oppressors, He sends them a Saviour and an Elohim, and shall deliver them.

Isa 19:21  And יהוה shall be known to Mitsrayim, and the Mitsrites shall know יהוה in that day, and make slaughtering and meal offering, and shall make a vow to יהוה and pay it.

Isa 19:22  And יהוה shall smite Mitsrayim, smite it and heal it. And they shall turn to יהוה, and He shall hear them and heal them.

Isa 19:23  In that day there shall be a highway from Mitsrayim to Ashshur, and Ashshur shall come into Mitsrayim and Mitsrayim into Ashshur, and Mitsrayim shall serve with Ashshur. 

Isa 19:24  In that day Yisra’ěl shall be one of three with Mitsrayim and Ashshur, even a blessing in the midst of the earth,

Isa 19:25  whom יהוה of hosts shall bless, saying, “Blessed is Mitsrayim My people, and Ashshur the work of My hands, and Yisra’ěl My inheritance.”

The Torah repeatedly commands that sacrifices be offered only at the place Yahuah chooses.

Some key passages include:

  • Deuteronomy 12:5–14
  • Deuteronomy 12:26–27
  • Leviticus 17:3–9

Deu 12:13  “Guard yourself that you do not offer your ascending offerings in every place that you see,
Deu 12:14  except in the place which יהוה chooses, in one of your tribes, there you are to offer your ascending offerings, and there you are to do all that I command you

 Deu 12:26  “Only, the set-apart gifts which you have, and your vowed offerings, you are to take up and go to the place which יהוה chooses.
Deu 12:27  “And you shall make your ascending offerings, the meat and the blood, on the slaughter-place of יהוה your Elohim. And the blood of your slaughterings is poured out on the slaughter-place of יהוה your Elohim, and you eat the meat.

After the central sanctuary was established, unauthorized altars were forbidden.

So Isaiah 19 immediately raises the question:

Why would Egypt have an altar to Yahuah?

That is a legitimate question.

What does Isaiah actually say?

Notice the repeated wording:

“In the land of Mitsrayim.”

“In the midst of the land of Mitsrayim.”

“At its border.”

The passage describes actual Egypt geographically in its first blush meaning. 

A few observations:

1. Revelation 11 establishes that prophetic names can be symbolic.

It is referenced the great city:

“…where also their Master was impaled.”

It is called:

“spiritually Sodom and Mitsrayim.”

This demonstrates that “Mitsrayim” can function as a theological symbol rather than merely a geographical location. In prophetic literature, Egypt often represents bondage, oppression, estrangement from Yahuah, or the old condition of man.

2. Isaiah frequently uses names for their theological meaning.

Isaiah is full of symbolic names:

  • Shear-Yashub
  • Maher-shalal-hash-baz
  • Ariel
  • EmmanuEL

Names are often chosen because they communicate an idea beyond geography.

So asking whether “Mitsrayim” and “Ashshur” carry symbolic weight in Isaiah 19 is a legitimate question.

3. The observation about the three titles is interesting.

Verse 25 does not simply list three nations. It gives three covenant descriptions:

  • “My people”
  • “The work of My hands”
  • “My inheritance”

Those expressions occur elsewhere with reference to YasharEL. 

For example:

  • “My people” is repeatedly used of YasharEL.
  • “The work of My hands” is applied to YasharEL in places such as Isaiah 60:21.
  • “My inheritance” is likewise a covenant designation used for YasharEL throughout the Tanakh.

Isa 60:21  “And your people, all of them righteous, shall inherit the earth forever – a branch of My planting, a work of My hands, to be adorned.

That raises the question: why are three covenant titles distributed among three names?

4. The proposed progression

You suggest the names are describing stages rather than three ethnic groups.

In the reading:

  • Mitsrayim = the former enemy/bondage/siege
  • The Hebrew word matsor rooted in Mitsrayim means מצור  which means siege
    • The one once enslaved or alienated becomes “My people.” 
  • Ashshur = means ordered steps or disciplined progress.
    • The one being fashioned becomes “the work of My hands.”
  • YasharEL = The root word Yashar means the completed upright one.
    • The perfected covenant people become “My inheritance.”

That forms a literary progression rather than a geopolitical alliance.

5. The altar interpretation.

This is probably one of the strongest argument.

If “Mitsrayim” is symbolic, then the altar presents no conflict with the Torah.

If “Mitsrayim” is literal, one must explain how sacrifices occur outside the place Yahuah chose.

The symbolic reading removes that tension because the “altar in the midst of Mitsrayim” represents worship arising from those who were formerly in spiritual Egypt.

6.  The “Highway” motif

Isaiah has already established the symbolism of the highway.

In Isaiah 11:16:

“There shall be a highway for the remnant…”

In Isaiah 35:8: “A highway shall be there, and a way, and it shall be called the Way of Holiness.”

Throughout Isaiah, the highway is more than a road; it is a prophetic image of Yahuah’s redemptive way by which the redeemed return to Him. So if Isaiah 19:23 is read in light of Isaiah’s own recurring imagery, the “highway from Mitsrayim to Ashshur” can certainly be understood symbolically rather than merely as an international road.

7. One of three” versus “a third”

Hebrew does not literally say “one of three.”

The phrase is:

יִהְיֶה יִשְׂרָאֵל שְׁלִישִׁיָּה

yihyeh YasharEL shelishiyyah

The key word comes from שלישי (shalishi), meaning “third.”

Many English translations render it “one of three” because the next verse names Egypt, Assyria, and YasharEL together, making the sense intelligible in English. But the underlying Hebrew emphasizes “third” rather than using the numeral “one.”

That leaves more interpretive flexibility than the English suggests.

The proposed reading

Within the scriptural framework, the progression would be:

  • Mitsrayim – the condition of bondage, estrangement, or enmity.
  • Ashshur – the stage of discipline, formation, and ordered steps.
  • YasharEL – the remnant that abides as Yahuah’s inheritance.

Then “YasharEL shall be a third” would not merely count three nations but indicate the third covenantal state, the remnant preserved through the journey.

That also connects with one of Isaiah’s dominant themes—the remnant (she’ar). Isaiah repeatedly presents history as a movement from judgment to purification to a preserved remnant.

An interesting literary connection

This observation also resonates with Isaiah’s naming of his own son, Shear-Yashub (“A remnant shall return”). The remnant theme permeates the book. If Isaiah 19 is read typologically, then the “third” could indeed be heard as more than arithmetic; it could signify the remnant that emerges after judgment and restoration.

8. The refining of “the third”

The clearest passage is Zechariah 13:8–9.

“Two parts in all the land shall be cut off and perish; but the third shall be left therein. And I will bring the third through the fire, and will refine them as silver is refined…”

Here, the “third” is not merely one-third mathematically. It is the surviving remnant that passes through judgment into covenant fidelity.

The movement is:

  • Judgment
  • Preservation of the third
  • Refinement
  • Covenant relationship

Notice the climax:

“They shall call on My Name… I will say, ‘It is My people’; and they shall say, ‘Yahuah is my Elohim.’”

That is covenant restoration.

9. Isaiah’s remnant theology

Isaiah repeatedly develops the same pattern.

  • Judgment falls.
  • A remnant survives.
  • The remnant is purified.
  • Zion is restored.

Examples include:

  • Isaiah 1:25–27
  • Isaiah 4:3–4
  • Isaiah 6:13
  • Isaiah 10:20–22
  • Isaiah 11:11–16

Although Isaiah does not always use the word “third,” the remnant-after-judgment pattern is one of the book’s central theological themes.

Thus, if Isaiah 19:24 says YasharEL is “third” (shelishiyyah), one could explore whether Isaiah intentionally echoes this broader remnant motif. The text itself does not explicitly state that, but the literary connection is worth examining.

10. Revelation’s repeated “third”

Revelation reveals the covenantal people by the judgments

During the trumpet judgments, a third of creation is repeatedly struck:

  • A third of the earth
  • A third of the trees
  • A third of the sea
  • A third of the rivers
  • A third of the heavenly lights
  • A third of mankind

This repeated fraction functions primarily as judgments revealing the covenantal people. It is significant that Revelation consistently uses one-third.

The sequence is:

  • Partial judgment.
  • Opportunity for repentance.
  • Escalation if repentance is refused.

Indeed, after many of these judgments, Revelation explicitly notes that people did not repent.

Revelation’s “third” is not a mathematical fraction. Rather it is a covenantal figure of speech in which judgment falls around the covenant people while the true “third” is preserved within it.

Consider the Exodus plagues:

  • Darkness covered Egypt, yet there was light where YasharEL dwelt.
  • The death of livestock struck Egypt but Goshen was distinguished.
  • The hail devastated Egypt, yet Yahuah made a distinction.
  • The firstborn of Egypt died, while those under the blood of the Lamb were preserved.

The judgments were selective, not indiscriminate.

The principle is:

Judgment reveals the remnant.

The same principle appears in:

  • Noah — the world perished, the covenant family remained.
  • Lot — Sodom fell, Lot was brought out.
  • Elijah — thousands bowed to Baal, yet a remnant was preserved.
  • Zechariah 13 — the third passes through the fire.

If Revelation is read through that covenant pattern, then the repeated “third” judgments could indeed be viewed as measured covenant judgments rather than mere percentages. The judgments are limited because Yahuah is still distinguishing, calling, and preserving.


11. Comparing Zechariah and Revelation

Zechariah’s “The Third” and Revelation’s “One Third” — A Covenant Comparison

Many interpret “one third” in Revelation as a literal fraction of creation being destroyed. However, when read through the Torah and the Prophets, the expression points to a covenant pattern rather than mere mathematics.

A. Zechariah defines “The Third”

Zechariah 13:8–9

“And I shall bring the Third through the fire, and refine them as silver is refined, and try them as gold is tried. They shall call on My Name, and I shall answer them. I shall say, ‘This is My people,’ while they say, ‘יהוה is my Elohim.’”

Here the Third is:

  • The covenant remnant.
  • Brought through judgment.
  • Refined rather than destroyed.
  • Declared to be Yahuah’s people.

The fire does not consume the Third; it reveals and purifies the Third.

B. Revelation uses “one third” repeatedly

Revelation repeatedly declares that one third of the land, sea, rivers, trees and heavenly lights are struck (Revelation 8–9).

A purely literal reading sees these as mathematical fractions.

However, the prophetic language of Scripture consistently uses symbolic imagery.

  • Land (ארץ / arets) frequently represents covenant land.
  • Waters, rivers and seas symbolize peoples and covenant communities.
  • Trees symbolize people.
  • Lights symbolize rulers and covenant witnesses.

Therefore the repeated expression “one third” should be read within the prophetic symbolism already established in the Tanakh.

C. Zechariah interprets Revelation

Zechariah supplies the prophetic meaning of the Third.

The Third is the remnant preserved through judgment.

Revelation therefore is not primarily measuring percentages.

It is revealing the covenant remnant through measured judgment.

Just as Zechariah’s Third passes through the fire, Revelation’s repeated judgments expose and separate the true covenant people from the fleshly body.

D.  Torah establishes the pattern


The Exodus is the foundation.

When Yahuah judged Mitsrayim:

  • Plagues fell upon the land.
  • Yet YasharEL was distinguished.
  • Judgment and preservation occurred simultaneously.

The same covenant principle governs Revelation.

Judgment falls upon the covenant body, while the true remnant is preserved within it.

The Third is not destroyed.

The Third is manifested.

EThe purpose of the judgments


The trumpet judgments are therefore covenant judgments.

They expose:

  • the flesh from the Ruach,
  • the outward assembly from the inward remnant,
  • the carcass from the living body.

Judgment begins with the house of Elohim.

The fleshly covenant body receives judgment.

The spiritual YasharEL emerges justified.

F. The prophetic harmony


Zechariah

  • The Third passes through fire.
  • The Third is refined.
  • The Third becomes “My people.”

Revelation

  • One third repeatedly comes under measured judgment.
  • The judgments separate and reveal the true covenant remnant.
  • The Third ultimately stands justified before Yahuah.

Thus Zechariah provides the prophetic key for understanding Revelation. The “Third” is not merely a numerical fraction but the covenant remnant revealed through divine judgment, just as Yahuah distinguished YasharEL from Mitsrayim during the Exodus.

G. Mystery Babylon

Mystery Babylon is not merely a geographical location.

Just as Revelation calls Yerushalayim “spiritually Sodom and Mitsrayim,” prophetic names describe covenant conditions rather than merely political locations.

Babylon therefore represents covenant confusion, apostasy and fleshly path/ walking in the letter.

Judgment upon Babylon is judgment upon covenant unfaithfulness.

The faithful remnant emerges from within her.

“Come out of her, My people.”

HBeginning at the House of Elohim

Judgment begins with those claiming covenant relationship.

The outward body undergoes judgment.

Within that body, the true remnant is manifested.

The fleshly assembly is exposed.

The spiritual assembly is justified.

This fulfills the pattern:

  • Wheat separated from chaff.
  • Sheep separated from goats.
  • Wise virgins separated from foolish.
  • The Third refined through fire.

I. The complete covenant progression

The prophetic journey forms one continuous pattern.

  • Mitsrayim — bondage, estrangement and the old man.
  • Wilderness / Ashshur — chastening, discipline and refinement.
  • The Third — the remnant revealed through fire.
  • YasharEL — the upright inheritance of Yahuah.

Judgment never exists merely to destroy.

Judgment exists to reveal, purify and vindicate the covenant remnant.

Thus throughout Scripture the Third signifies those whom Yahuah preserves, refines and acknowledges as His people after the fire has accomplished its work.

12. The covenant-stage proposal

The proposal is more theological than lexical:

  1. Mitsrayim — bondage, estrangement, the natural condition.
  2. Ashshur — discipline, chastening, formation.
  3. YasharEL (the third) — the refined covenant remnant.

That aligns conceptually with passages like:

  • Bondage → Exodus.
  • Wilderness → Refinement.
  • Promised inheritance.

And with Zechariah:

  • Judgment → Fire → “My people.”

It also resonates with Isaiah’s recurring remnant theology.

13. A broader canonical pattern

If one steps back, there is a recurring biblical movement that spans multiple books:

  • Mitsrayim — bondage, oppression, estrangement.
  • Wilderness / discipline — testing, chastening, purification.
  • Inheritance — covenant maturity and restored fellowship.

That pattern appears in the Exodus narrative, the prophets, and is echoed in later prophetic literature.

Within that broader framework, Isaiah 19 is describing covenant stages rather than merely three geopolitical entities has internal coherence. The strongest textual support for associating “the third” with a purified covenant people comes from Zechariah 13:8–9. The repeated “thirds” in Revelation, however, function differently in their immediate context: they emphasize measured, partial judgments rather than explicitly identifying a covenant remnant, even though those judgments serve the larger biblical pattern of calling people to repentance.

13. The Covenant Significance of “The Third”

The Hebrew word שְׁלִישִׁי (shelishi) simply means “third.” It is the ordinary Hebrew adjective used throughout Scripture for the third day, third year, third month, third rank and the third part.

While the word itself does not intrinsically mean “the third day,” Scripture repeatedly associates the Third with covenant transition, life emerging after judgment, restoration, and appearing before Yahuah.

This recurring pattern includes:

  • Genesis 22:4 – On the third day, Abraham sees the place of sacrifice, foreshadowing resurrection through obedient faith.
  • Exodus 19:11, 16 – On the third day, Yahuah descends upon Mount Sinai to establish covenant with His people.
  • Joshua 1:11 – After three days, YasharEL crosses the Jordan into the inheritance.
  • Hosea 6:2 – “After two days He shall revive us; on the third day He shall raise us up, and we shall live before Him.” Here the Third explicitly signifies restoration to covenant life.
  • Jonah 1:17 – Jonah emerges alive after three days, becoming a prophetic sign of deliverance through judgment.
  • Yahusha Mashiyach – Raised on the third day, fulfilling the pattern of life triumphing over death and inaugurating the renewed covenant.

Thus, throughout Scripture, the Third consistently marks the point at which judgment gives way to restoration, death gives way to life, and covenant promises reach their fulfillment.

This pattern illuminates passages such as Zechariah 13:8–9, where the Third passes through the fire and becomes “My people,” and provides a theological backdrop for understanding Isaiah 19:24, where YasharEL is called “the Third” (שְׁלִישִׁיָּה). Rather than functioning merely as an ordinal number, the Third becomes a recurring biblical motif of the covenant remnant emerging purified after divine judgment.

Summary

This study traces a single covenant thread woven throughout the Torah, the Prophets and the Apostolic Writings, demonstrating that the Scriptures reveal one unified message rather than disconnected historical accounts. By allowing the Torah to serve as the foundation for interpreting prophecy, it examines how recurring themes, prophetic names, symbolic places and covenant language consistently point to Yahuah’s redemptive purpose.

Special focus is given to Isaiah 19, Zechariah 13 and the trumpet judgments of Revelation, exploring the biblical significance of “the Third” (שְׁלִישִׁי), the remnant, refinement through judgment, and the covenant progression from bondage to inheritance. The study also considers the prophetic use of names such as Mitsrayim, Ashshur and YasharEL, the symbolism of the Highway of Set Apartness, the relationship between the Torah and prophetic worship, and the distinction between the outward covenant community and the remnant preserved by Yahuah.

Rather than viewing these passages as isolated prophecies, this work presents them as interconnected witnesses that illuminate one another through the consistent patterns established by the Scriptures themselves. The result is a covenant-centered reading that seeks to demonstrate the harmony of Yahuah’s Word from Bereshith to Revelation, revealing His unchanging purpose to refine, preserve and establish a people for His Name.