Resurrection is mentioned in Isaiah 26:19.
Resurrection; per God religions; occurs after life on the Day of Judgement where all the universe is changed and the earth is changed and the skies. So, no one can predict where the resurrection event would happen.
Yes. In Judaism it is called techiyas hameisim: revival of the dead; and is prophesied in Isaiah and Daniel.
No, there is no record of Moses directly speaking about a resurrection from the dead in the Old Testament. The concept of resurrection was more explicitly developed in later biblical texts and in the teachings of Jesus in the New Testament.
They did not. They, as Jews, knew that a Messiah was promised from God. But they did not predict the coming of Christ and in fact most of them did not believe He was who He said He was until after the resurrection and ascention. The Bible tells us that they were very afraid when they saw the resurrected Jesus. If you can even imagine what that was like. They had seen Him die and laid in the tomb so they were really freaked out to see Him up walking around. After the resurrection He was able to walk through solid walls and disappear at will.
Isaiah 1:1 introduces the book as the work of Isaiah, son of Amoz, who lived in Judah during the reigns of the Judahite kings Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah, early in the seventh century BCE. The Book of Isaiah then omits the 150 year period from Hezekiah to the fall of Jerusalem and recommences with the Babylonian Exile. The remainder of the Book of Isaiah was written in Babylon in the middle of the sixth century BCE and finally after the Return from Exile. The three authors of the separate works that later became the Book of Isaiah are sometimes known as First Isaiah (I Isaiah), Second Isaiah (II Isaiah) and Third Isaiah (III Isaiah). Much of First Isaiah's writing was in the form of oracles, vague comments and predictions that could be interpreted in many ways. Reading them in hindsight, it is almost always possible to link an oracle to a future event in some way. First Isaiah witnessed the fall of Israel, so at the time he wrote his book, this was no longer a prophecy. He did not predict the Babylonian Exile, which was far off in the future, but Second Isaiah wrote of the events in Babylon.
It was a demonstration that the eventual resurrection (Isaiah 26:19) is meant literally, and it was also in order to teach us to never give up hope.
Isaiah mathurin
Isaiah means "Yahweh is Salvation." The Book of Isaiah is often referred to as the Gospel according to Isaiah. Isaiah is the first of the Major Prophets in the English Bible.
The Book of Isaiah is named after the prophet Isaiah who is believed to have authored it. Isaiah was a prominent figure in ancient Israelite prophecy, and his writings cover a wide range of themes including judgment, comfort, and the coming of the Messiah.
Resurrection
Christianity had the resurrection.