A book of the Bible.
[After ISAIAH1.]
Dictionary:
I·sa·iah2 (ī-zā'ə, ī-zī'ə) ![]() |
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Isaiah |
For more information on Isaiah, visit Britannica.com.
| Encyclopedia of Judaism: Book of Isaiah |
A key role is played by the Servant of God, who will proclaim truth and justice to the world. The identity of this "servant" has been much disputed, and there is disagreement among scholars as to whether these sections are even integral to the work.
Chapters 55-66 are usually dated slightly later than Isaiah chapters 40-55, relying on references to the rebuilding of the Temple (56:5, 7; 60:7, 10). An eloquent plea for deliverance (63:7-64:12) anticipates the glorious intervention of God, which will come to Zion and the. faithful people (ch. 60-61). This glorious future will include all nations together at last; Jews and Gentile will both worship and serve God (56:3-8, 66:18-23).
According to the sages, Isaiah was the son of a prophet (Meg. 15a) and was of the tribe of Judah (Sotah 10b). He encapsulated all of Jewish belief in two terse statements: "Observe what is right and do what is just" (56:1) (Mak. 24a).
Isaiah's message has always impressed the Jewish people, and no fewer than 15 of the 54 yearly Sabbath prophetic readings (haftarot) are taken from it, including all seven of the "haftarot of consolation" which follow the fast of Tishah Be-Av.
| Bible Guide: Book of Isaiah |
The Book of Isaiah is generally regarded as two works combined under one name. First Isaiah (or Isaiah I), chapters 1-39, written in the late 8th century B.C. focuses primarily on prophecies of woe to Judah. Second Isaiah (or Deutero Isaiah), composed of Isaiah chapters 40-66, dates from the early post-exilic period, and, in contrast to Isaiah chapters 1-39, presents prophecies of weal and consolation. Two scrolls of Isaiah have been discovered at Qumran. One is virtually complete (IQISa) but differs from the more fragmentary second scroll (IQISb). However, it is this second scroll which more nearly matches the Masoretic (i.e. traditional) Hebrew text for whose continuity the scrolls provide excellent evidence, also demonstrating that while the Qumran community may have considered the Book of Isaiah as accepted scripture, they had not canonized a particular text.
The author of Isaiah chapters 1-39 is identified as Isaiah, the son of Amoz (1:1; 2:1; 13:1). Isaiah had a wife (8:3), children (7:3; 8:3) and disciples (8:16). Beyond this, little is known about the man (See ISAIAH).
The historical period of Isaiah's prophecy spans three significant events. The earliest (735 B.C.) is the Syro-Ephraimite war (7:1-8:15) when Aram (Syria) and Ephraim (Israel) tried to coerce Judah into joining their campaign against Assyria. Isaiah used this occasion to prophesy against relying on foreign alliances instead of depending upon God (chap. 7). When Aram and Ephraim failed to gain Judah's help both kingdoms fell to Assyria, Aram in 734 B.C. and Israel in 722. Isaiah used these events as an object lesson when he tried to convince Judah to change its sinful ways lest it suffer a similar fate (9:8-10:4). Assyria continued its territorial expansion and in 701 B.C. Jerusalem was besieged and nearly captured. Isaiah again warned against seeking assistance from Egypt rather than trusting in God (30:1-17), and claimed that Jerusalem was saved only after King Hezekiah repented and turned to reliance upon the God of Israel (chaps. 36-39).
The book's complex composition contains at least six different literary units (chap. 1; chaps. 2-12; chaps. 13-23; chaps. 24-27; chaps. 28-35; chaps. 36-39), ranging from oracles against foreign nations (chaps.13-23), to historical narratives (chaps. 36-39), to "woe" oracles (chaps. 28-35), to prophecies about Judah (chaps. 2-12). In addition, there are three different types of material; oracles from the prophet (1:2-31); autobiographical accounts (chap. 6); and stories about the prophet (chap. 7). All of this suggests a long process by which the Book of Isaiah attained its current form.
Like many other prophets, Isaiah condemned the ethical practices of the people (1:4; 10:1-4), calling upon them to repent and mend their ways (1:18-20). He used the elaborate allegory of the vineyard to elucidate this point (5:1-7). However, his pleas seeming to fall on deaf ears (5:8-23), Isaiah began to talk about a coming "Day of the Lord" (2:6-22) – not in any definitive eschatological sense, but in the firm belief that sinfulness would not go unpunished (3:1-17).
Isaiah 10:5-14 depicts God using Assyria as his "rod of anger" to chastise Israel and Judah. Subsequently, god turned against the king of Assyria for the latter's pretentious assumption that his conquests demonstrated his own power and not that of God (10:12-13).
In spite of his pessimism, Isaiah saw hope in two directions. One was the remnant (4:3; 10:20-23), the faithful who would survive the punishment and form the basis for a new beginning. The other hope was in a new king. Having lived through the sinful reign of Ahaz. Isaiah looked forward to a new anointed one ("messiah") of the Lord. This is the background for the messianic oracles in Isaiah chapters 7, 9, 11, primarily concerned with the coming of Hezekiah as a new king for Judah. Christian interpretation of these passages as anticipating Jesus, has resulted in a misunderstanding of the Hebrew text of Isaiah 7:14 which mentions a "young woman", and not a "virgin"; the child whose birth is foreseen is probably awaited by the wife of the king.
The middle portion of Isaiah chapters 1-39 is composed of oracles against the nations (chaps. 13-23) and the Isaiah Apocalypse (chaps. 24-27). The first section anticipates the turning of God's hand against the enemies of Judah. The Isaiah Apocalypse, which pertains to the eschatological end of time, is viewed by many scholars as a later addition.
Isaiah chapters 28-35 is a series of oracles concerning Judah and Ephraim. The oracles about Ephraim grow out of anger toward Ephraim for turning against Judah, and, more importantly, against God. The oracles regarding Judah feature a strong streak of Zion theology (29:1-8; 31:4-9): since God resides in Jerusalem, the city is inviolable, for he will defend it from all attackers.
Isaiah chapters 36-39 relates the attack of the Assyrian king Sennacherib upon Jerusalem; the account of Hezekiah's repentance (37:1-4) leading to the city's miraculous salvation (37:36-38), strongly reinforces the Zion theology of the previous section. However, the parallel account in II Kings 18:13-20:19, contains a slight but significant variation: II Kings 18:14-16 records the payment of a tribute by Hezekiah to Sennacherib in order to save Jerusalem. This account is also found, in strikingly similar language, in the annals of Sennacherib, casting doubt upon the accuracy of Isaiah's version. However, no matter what actually happened, the saving of the city was interpreted by Isaiah as an example of god's action in the world.
The author of chapters 40-66 is unknown, but is clearly not identical with the writer of the first 39 chapters. Historical background, prophecies and theological perspective all point to a different author.
The historical background of Isaiah chapters 40-55 is reflected in references to the victorious Babylonians (Chaldeans) who did not rise to power until 605 B.C., and to their demise which took place in 538 (cf Is 43:14; chaps. 46-47; esp. 47:1-3); the Israelites have been conquered, their Temple is in ruins but will be rebuilt (44:24-28) and they are to return from captivity in Babylon (48:20). All of this points to events which occurred after the fall of Jerusalem in 586 B.c. There are two references to Cyrus, king of Persia (44:28; 45:1) who defeated the Babylonians in 539 and allowed the Israelites to return to their homeland and rebuild their Temple. This indicates that the author's historical frame of reference was the early post-exilic period.
Unlike Isaiah chapters 1-39, the whole tenor of Isaiah chapters 40-55 stresses hope, consolation and reconciliation. The difficulties are past and it is time for a new beginning (40:1-2). The harsh invective of First Isaiah is absent. There is even the moving reassurance that despite the people's suffering. God cannot and will not forget them (49:14-18).
The theological perspective seeks to reinforce this sense of reconciliation and solace, and assert important claims about God. On the one hand, there are passages which emphasize God as the omnipotent creator. Having just experienced the traumatic events of the Exile, the people need to be reassured by the knowledge that their sufferings – punishment for former sins – were brought about by God (40:2). Similarly, the elaborate "creation hymns" assert God's power over the created order (40:12-31; 42:5-9), including control of political events not only in Judah but throughout the world. It is God who sent Cyrus (41:2-4), calls Cyrus his shepherd (a common title for a king) whom God used for his purpose (44:28), and his messiah (anointed) whom God led against the nations (45:1).
These reassurances are reinforced by an important understanding of the universalism of God. No longer can the Lord be perceived as an exclusively Israelite god who coexists with gods of other peoples. The God of Israel is now hailed as the only God (44:6; 45:5, 18; 46:9-11). This claim includes challenges to the viability of other gods (41:21-24) and satirical passages about the futility of idolatry (44:9-20).
Comprehension of Isaiah chapters 40-55 depends on deciphering the role and identity of the "Servant". There are four "Servant Songs" in Second Isaiah (42:1-4; 49:1-6; 50:4-11; 52:13-53:13), and many other references to a Servant (e.g. 41:8; 43:10; 44:1; 45:4; 48:20). Whether the Servant songs are intergral to Isaiah chapters 40-55 is still a point of major disagreement. It is the identity of the Servant which is the larger and more highly debated issue. One position is that the Servant somehow represents a group, and Israel is the main candidate. Passages such as 44:21 and 49:3 clearly support this perspective, but on the other hand, how can Israel be its own servant or teacher (50:4-11)? Such difficulties have led to modification of this collective interpretation; the Servant is an ideal Israel or a select, faithful portion of Israel, or the group is represented by an individual (as a corporate personality).
Others, citing such passages as 50:4-11; 52:13-53:13, argue that the Servant is an individual, whether historical or ideal. Among the historical figures proposed have been Moses, Hezekiah, Isaiah and the author of Second Isaiah, himself. If it is an ideal individual, the foremost candidate is the king. Having lost their sovereign with the fall of Jerusalem, the people look forward to a new king who, like all former kings, will be God's anointed, his messiah (this is the basis for "messianic expectation"). The main difficulties with this understanding of the king as the Servant are dealt with by accepting the idea of corporate personality, where the king becomes the personification of the nation. The problem of identification, however, still remains. The NT writers took the Songs out of their original context and re-interpreted them as referring to Jesus. The remaining chapters, 56-66, are usually dated slightly later than Isaiah chapters 40-55, relying on references to the rebuilding of the Temple (56:5, 7; 60:7, 10). There is no clear reference to an author, but ties to Isaiah chapters 40-55 warrant the attribution to the semi-anonymous prophet.
The oracles express a consistent concern for the anticipated future intervention of God. Its glory and magnificence are detailed, and its delay is considered a disturbing reality, for which chapter 59 blames the sins of the people. Reference to corruption among the people (56:9-57:13) indicates the source of the problem; the legalism of Isaiah 56:1-8 proffers guidelines to correct their sinfulness. An eloquent plea for deliverance (63:7-64:12) anticipates the glorious intervention of God, which will come to Zion and the faithful people (chaps. 60-61). This glorious future will include all nations together at last; Jew and Gentile will both worship and serve God (56:3-8; 66:18-23).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Isaiah |
Bibliography
See C. Westermann, Isaiah 40-66 (1969); J. N. Oswalt, Isaiah 1-39 (1986).
| Wikipedia: Book of Isaiah |
The Book of Isaiah (Hebrew: ספר ישעיה) is a book of the Bible traditionally attributed to the Prophet Isaiah, who lived in the second half of the 8th century BC.[1] In the first 39 chapters, Isaiah prophesies doom for a sinful Judah and for all the nations of the world that oppose God. The last 27 chapters prophesy the restoration of the nation of Israel. This section includes the Songs of the Suffering Servant, four separate passages that Christians believe prefigure the coming of Jesus Christ, and which are otherwise traditionally thought to refer to the nation of Israel. This second of the book's two major sections also includes prophecies of a new creation in God's glorious future kingdom.[2]
There is considerable debate about the dating of the text; one widely accepted critical hypothesis suggests that much if not most of the text was not written in the 8th century BC.[3] Tradition ascribes the Book of Isaiah to a single author, Isaiah himself. Modern scholarship suggests the text has two or three authors. This later author or authors, and their work or works, are known as Deutero- or Second Isaiah and Trito- or Third Isaiah respectively.[2][4]
Contents |
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Part of a series
of articles on the |
|---|
| Tanakh (Books common to all Christian and Judaic canons) |
| Genesis · Exodus · Leviticus · Numbers · Deuteronomy · Joshua · Judges · Ruth · 1–2 Samuel · 1–2 Kings · 1–2 Chronicles · Ezra (Esdras) · Nehemiah · Esther · Job · Psalms · Proverbs · Ecclesiastes · Song of Songs · Isaiah · Jeremiah · Lamentations · Ezekiel · Daniel · Minor prophets |
| Deuterocanon |
| Tobit · Judith · 1 Maccabees · 2 Maccabees · Wisdom (of Solomon) · Sirach · Baruch · Letter of Jeremiah · Additions to Daniel · Additions to Esther |
| Greek and Slavonic Orthodox canon |
| 1 Esdras · 3 Maccabees · Prayer of Manasseh · Psalm 151 |
| Georgian Orthodox canon |
| 4 Maccabees · 2 Esdras |
| Ethiopian Orthodox "narrow" canon |
| Apocalypse of Ezra · Jubilees · Enoch · 1–3 Meqabyan · 4 Baruch |
| Syriac Peshitta |
| Psalms 152–155 · 2 Baruch · Letter of Baruch |
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The 66 chapters of Isaiah consist primarily of prophecies of Babylon, Assyria, Philistia, Moab, Syria, Israel (the northern kingdom), Ethiopia, Egypt, Arabia, and Phoenicia. The prophesies concerning them can be summarized as saying that God is the God of the whole earth, and that nations which think of themselves as secure in their own power might well be conquered by other nations, at God's command.
The first 39 chapters are thought to be authored by Isaiah, with the remaining chapters added later by one or more scribes working in Isaiah's tradition. See the discussion in the Authorship section below.
Chapters 1-5 and 28-29 prophesy judgment against Judah itself. Judah thinks itself safe because of its covenant relationship with God. However, God tells Judah (through Isaiah) that the covenant cannot protect them when they have broken it by idolatry, the worship of other gods, and by acts of injustice and cruelty, which oppose God's law.
Some exceptions to this overall foretelling of doom do occur, throughout the early chapters of the book. Chapter 6 describes Isaiah's call to be a prophet of God. Chapters 35-39 provide historical material about King Hezekiah and his triumph of faith in God.
Chapters 24-34, while too complex to characterize easily, are primarily concerned with prophecies of a "Messiah," a person anointed or given power by God, and of the Messiah's kingdom, where justice and righteousness will reign. This section is seen by Jews as describing an actual king, a descendant of their great king, David, who will make Judah a great kingdom and Jerusalem a truly holy city. It is traditionally seen by Christians as describing Jesus. A number of modern scholars believe that it describes, in somewhat idealized terms, King Hezekiah, who was a descendant of David, and who tried to make Jerusalem into a holy city.
The prophecy continues with what some have called “The Book of Comfort” which begins in chapter 40 and completes the writing. In the first eight chapters of this book of comfort, Isaiah prophesies the deliverance of the Jews from the hands of the Babylonians and restoration of Israel as a unified nation in the land promised to them by God. Isaiah reaffirms that the Jews are indeed the chosen people of God in chapter 44 and that Yahweh is the only God for the Jews (and the only God of the universe) as he will show his power over the gods of Babylon in due time in chapter 46. In chapter 45:1, the Persian ruler Cyrus is named as the person of power who will overthrow the Babylonians and allow the return of Israel to their original land.
The remaining chapters of the book contain prophecies of the future glory of Zion. A "suffering servant" is referred to (esp. ch. 53). Rabbinic Judaism understands this as a metaphor for Israel; Christians see it as referring to the Messiah.[5] Although there is still the mention of judgment of false worshippers and idolaters (65 & 66), the book ends with a message of hope of a righteous ruler who extends salvation to his righteous subjects living in the Lord’s kingdom on earth.
Supporters of two authors division use the term Deutero-Isaiah in reference to chapters 40-66, but to the supporters of three divisions in authorship this term usually refers to chapters 40-55 only.
Isaiah lived in the late eighth century BC. He was part of the upper class but urged care of the downtrodden. At the end, he was loyal to King Hezekiah, but disagreed with the King's attempts to forge alliances with Egypt and Babylon in response to the Assyrian threat.
Isaiah prophesied during the reigns of four kings: Uzziah (also known as Azariah), Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. According to tradition, he was martyred during the reign of Manasseh, who came to the throne in 687 BC, by being cut in two by a wooden saw. That he is described as having ready access to the kings would suggest an aristocratic origin.
This was the time of the divided kingdom, with Israel in the north and Judah in the south. There was prosperity for both the kingdoms during Isaiah’s youth with little foreign interference. Jeroboam II ruled in the north and Uzziah in the south. The small kingdoms of Palestine, as well as Syria, were under the influence of Egypt. However, in 745 BC, Tiglath-pileser III came to the throne of Assyria. He was interested in Assyrian expansionism, especially to the west; and 2 Kings 15:17-22 mentions that King Menahem of Israel paid tribute to him ("King Pul").
Because of the threat from Tiglath-pileser III, Syria (or "Aram") and Israel (led now by Pekah) tried to force Judah to ally with them around 734 BC. Ahaz was on the throne of Judah then. He was advised by Isaiah to trust in the Lord, but, instead, he called to Assyria for help. Pekah of Israel and Rezin of Syria attacked Judah and inflicted damage on it before Assyria came to its aid, but there would be more serious religious consequences of Ahaz’s refusal to accept the Lord’s guidance through Isaiah.
With Israel under King Pekah no longer loyal, Tiglath-pileser attacked in 733 BC. He took much of the land of Israel (2 Kings 15:29-30) leaving only the city of Samaria and its surroundings independent.[6] Judah, however, was not involved.
Damascus, capital of Syria, was taken by the Assyrians in 732. Tiglath–pileser died in 727 BC, raising false hopes for the Palestinian countries. Ahaz died a year later. Isaiah warned Philistia and the other countries not to revolt against Assyria. Hoshea, then king of Samaria, withheld tribute to Assyria. Consequently, Shalmaneser V, the new king of Assyria, laid siege to Samaria for 3 years, and his successor, Sargon II, took the city and deported 27,000 Israelites to northern parts of the Assyrian empire. This marked the end of the Northern Kingdom of Israel forever, as its population was taken into exile and dispersed amongst Assyrian provinces. It is as a result of this exile that reference is made to Ten Lost Tribes of Israel.
There was peace in the area for 10 years, but then, Sargon returned in 711 BC to crush a coalition of Egypt and the Philistines. Judah had stayed out of this conflict, Hezekiah wisely listening to Isaiah’s advice.
Merodach-Baladan took power in Babylon in 721 BC. Sargon took Babylon without a fight in 711 BC, but after Sargon’s death, Merodach-Baladan rebelled against Sargon's successor Sennacherib. Babylon was defeated this time but would revive in another century to defeat Assyria, subjugate the Jews and destroy Jerusalem.
Sennacherib came to the throne of Assyria in 705 BC. He had trouble immediately – with Ethiopian monarchs in Egypt (reference to Ethiopia here refers to present day north Sudan) and with the Babylonian leader, Merodach-Baladan. Despite Isaiah’s warnings, Hezekiah became involved as well. The Assyrians invaded the area, taking 46 towns before putting Jerusalem under siege. Isaiah persuaded Hezekiah to trust in the Lord and Jerusalem was spared.
Isaiah is concerned with the connection between worship and ethical behavior. One of his major themes is Yahweh's refusal to accept the ritual worship of those who are treating others with cruelty and injustice.
Isaiah speaks also of idolatry, which was common at the time. The Canaanite worship, which involved fertility rites, including sexual practices forbidden by Jewish law, had become popular among the Jewish people. Isaiah picks up on a theme used by other prophets and tells Judah that the nation of Israel is like a wife who is committing adultery, having run away from her true husband, YHWH.
An important theme is that YHWH is the God of the whole earth. Many gods of the time were believed to be local gods or national gods who could participate in warfare and be defeated by each other. The concern of these gods was the protection of their own particular nations.
No one can defeat YHWH; if YHWH's people suffer defeat in battle, it is only because he permits it to happen. Furthermore, Yahweh is concerned with more than the Jewish people. He has called Judah and Israel his covenant people for the specific purpose of teaching the world about him.
A unifying theme found throughout the Book of Isaiah is the use of the expression of "the Holy One of Israel". Some Christians interpret this as a title for Christ. It is found 12 times in chapters 1-39 and 14 times in chapters 40-66. This expression appears only 6 times within the Old Testament outside the book of Isaiah[7].
A final thematic goal that Isaiah constantly leans toward throughout the writing is the establishment of Yahweh's kingdom on earth, with rulers and subjects who strive to live by his will.
Jews and Christians have traditionally understood the book to have one author, Isaiah himself. This belief is reinforced by the New Testament, which quotes passages from Is. 40-66, together with a specific identification of Isaiah as their author, no fewer than seven times (Matt. 3:3, 8:17, 12:18; John 1:23, 12:38; Rom. 10:16, 10:26). The ancient Jewish historian Josephus also attributes both sections of the book of Isaiah to a single author.
Among the Christian churches, the Eastern Orthodox churches and the Oriental Orthodox churches maintain a strong historical position that the book was written by Isaiah himself following the teachings of Saint Cyril of Alexandria and others. Sirach 48:27-28, of the Orthodox and Catholic Deuterocanon, implies that Isaiah prophesied the prophecy of Isaiah 44.
The Talmud (Bava Basra 15a) says that the book of Isaiah was written by King Hezekiah and his assistants, of whom Chaim Dov Rabinowitz (1909-2001) says, in the introduction to his Daat Soferim Isaiah, may have lived long after Isaiah. Rabbi Joseph H. Hertz (1872 - 1946) wrote that the question of the book's authorship doesn't affect Jewish understanding of the book.[8]
One of the most critically debated issues in Isaiah is the proposition that it may have been the work of more than a single author. Different proposals suggest that there have been two or three main authors, while alternative views suggest an additional number of minor authors or editors.[9]
It is a matter of common agreement among scholars[10] that a division occurs at the end of chapter 39 and that subsequent portions were written by one or more additional authors. The typical objections to single authorship of the book of Isaiah are as follows:
Through chapter 39 most of the material is Isaiah's and is an accurate account of the situation in eighth-century Judah, even if chapters 13-14, 24-27, and 34-35 could be the work of his disciples and near contemporaries.[14]
Supporters of the three authors proposal see a further division at the end of chapter 55, and propose to divide the Book of Isaiah as follows:[15]
Scholars who disagree with the three author hypothesis suggest that the last ten chapters of the Book of Isaiah were written by Deutero-Isaiah at a later date.[16]
It has been suggested that the authorship of Isaiah took place over the span of as much as four centuries.[17]
| This section requires expansion. |
Songs of the Suffering Servant (also called the Servant songs or Servant poems) were first identified by Bernhard Duhm in his 1892 commentary on Isaiah. The songs are four poems taken from the Book of Isaiah written about a certain "servant of YHWH." God calls the servant to lead the nations, but the servant is horribly abused. The servant sacrifices himself, accepting the punishment due others. In the end, he is rewarded. The traditional Jewish interpretation is that the Servant is a metaphor for the Jewish people,[18] an opinion shared by most contemporary experts.[5] According to Duhm, the servant was some otherwise unknown individual, and the songs' author was a disciple. Various interpretations[citation needed] have followed: Zerubbabel, Jehoiachin, Moses. Duhm proposed in his commentary that the songs were added by a poet with leprosy. Sigmund Mowinckel suggested that the songs referred to Isaiah himself but later abandoned that interpretation. Christians traditionally see the suffering servant as Jesus Christ.[5]
The first poem has God speaking of His selection of the Servant who will bring justice to earth. Here the Servant is described as God's agent of justice, a king that brings justice in both royal and prophetic roles, yet justice is established neither by proclamation nor by force. He does not ecstatically announce salvation in the marketplace as prophets were bound to do but instead moves quietly and confidently to establish right religion. Isaiah 42:1-7
The second poem, written from the Servant's point of view, is an account of his pre-natal calling by God to lead both Israel and the nations. The Servant is now portrayed as the prophet of the Lord equipped and called to restore the nation to God. Yet, anticipating the fourth song, he is without success. Taken with the picture of the Servant in the first song, his success will come not by political or military action, but by becoming a light to the Gentiles. Ultimately his victory is in God's hands. Isaiah 49:1-6
The third poem has a darker yet more confident tone than the others. Although the song gives a first-person description of how the Servant was beaten and abused, here the Servant is described both as teacher and learner who follows the path God places him on without pulling back. Echoing the first song's "a bruised reed he will not break," he sustains the weary with a word. His vindication is left in God's hands. Isaiah 50:4-9
The last, longest, and most famous Servant poem, is a speech by Jehovah announcing the destiny of the Servant. Isaiah 53 declares that the Servant intercedes for others, taking the punishments and afflictions of others. In the end, he is rewarded with an exalted position. Much of song makes reference to an unknown group. See the many references to "we" and "our" in the song Isaiah 53:1-11 Early on the evaluation of the Servant by the "we" is negative: "we" esteemed him not, many were appalled by him, nothing in him was attractive to "us". But at the Servant's death the attitude of the "we" changes after verse 4 where the servant bears "our" iniquities, "our" sickness, by the servant's wounds "we" are healed. Posthumously, then, the Servant is vindicated by God. Because of its references to the vicarious sufferings of the servant, many Christians believe this song to be among the Messianic prophecies of Jesus. Isaiah 52:13-53:12
In the Gospels: The first song is directly quoted in Gospel of Matthew 12:18-21 The fourth song's "He was numbered with the transgressors" Isaiah 53:12 is directly quoted in Luke 22:37. The fourth song's "Surely he bore our diseases" [3] is quoted in Matthew 8:17 "Suffer many things" in Mark 9:12 may refer to Isaiah 53:2-3 "Ransom for many" Isaiah 53:10 is alluded to in Mark 10:45 and 14:24. "Make many righteous" in Isaiah 53:11 may be referred to in 3:15 "Divide the spoil with the strong" Isaiah 53:12 may be referenced in Luke 11:22
In the Epistles: Paul reflects fourth song in the following: "He was delivered up for our trespasses" Romans 4:25 "Many will be made righteous" Romans 5:19 "in the likeness of sinful flesh, condemned sin in the flesh" Romans 8.3 "Christ dies for our sins, in accordance with the scriptures" 1 Corinthians 15:3 The Kenosis passage portrays Christ as "taking the form of a servant" Philippians 2:6-11 1 Peter contains a number of allusions to the fourth song in chapter 2: "Christ also suffered for you"; "He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth"; "When he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten"; "He himself bore our sins in his body"; "By his wounds you have been healed"; "straying like sheep" 1 Peter 2.21-25
Some scholars contend that early Christian accounts of Jesus included details invented to show that Jesus had fulfilled prophecy and to explain why the Messiah would die a shameful death on a cross.[citation needed] They suggest scribes delved into scripture and found the Servant Songs, which they reinterpreted to be about Jesus.[citation needed] For example, the story of Joseph of Arimathea seems to fulfill a verse from the Servant Songs in which Jesus is to be buried with the rich. However, there is no textual variant evidence to suggest these are embellishments.[19]
The 2,100-year old Isaiah Scroll is the only complete scroll in the cache of 220 biblical scrolls discovered in a cave in Qumran on the northwestern coast of the Dead Sea. Adolfo Roitman, curator of the Shrine of the Book where the Dead Sea scrolls are kept, says that Isaiah was the most popular prophet of the Second Temple period: 21 copies of the scroll were found in Qumran.[1]
| Books of Nevi'im |
|---|
| First Prophets |
| 1. Joshua |
| 2. Judges |
| 3. Samuel |
| 4. Kings |
| Later Prophets |
| 5. Isaiah |
| 6. Jeremiah |
| 7. Ezekiel |
| 8. 12 minor prophets |
| Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
| Preceded by Kings |
Hebrew Bible | Followed by Jeremiah |
| Preceded by Song of Songs |
Protestant Old Testament | |
| Preceded by Sirach |
Roman Catholic Old Testament | |
| Eastern Orthodox Old Testament |
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| Isa. (abbreviation) | |
| Amoz | |
| Is. (abbreviation) |
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