No-one. Maybe you have the incorrect reference.
Jesus quoted from the book of Isaiah at least 10 times in the New Testament. Some of the most well-known references include in Matthew 13:14-15, Luke 4:17-19, and John 12:37-41. These references demonstrate Jesus' fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies and his authority as the promised Messiah.
This account can be found at Matthew 27:46 and Mark 15:34, as was prophesied at Psalm 22:1 (Isaiah 53:10)
The quote "great is the words (or are the words) of Isaiah" is not in the Bible.Another answer:You might be thinking of the verses where Jesus said, "Well did Isaiah prophesy about you..." See Matthew 15:7 and Mark 7:6.
Luke 2:15-20.
Matthew chapter 27, verse 33 says they took Jesus to Golgotha to be crucified.Mark chapter 15, verse 22 gives the same information as doesLuke chapter 23, verse 33. and John chapter 19 verse 17.
The Father and the Word had planned His incarnation before the foundations of the world. The first time it appears in the Bible is what many scholars associate to Him:Genesis 3:15 [Full Chapter]And I will put enmity Between you and the woman, And between your seed and her Seed; He shall bruise your head, And you shall bruise His heel."
Jesus's death is described in the New Testament. It can be found in the Gospels of Matthew (Chapter 27), Mark (Chapter 15), Luke (Chapter 23), and John (Chapter 19). The specific verses vary slightly between the different accounts.
Isaiah originally at Isaiah 11:1-4Others continued the illustration (Jeremiah 23:5 + 33:15)(Zechariah 3:8 + 6:12-13) to it's fulfillment ((Romans 15:8-12).
Matthew 27, Mark 15, Luke 23.
AnswerNo, biblical scholars do not see Isaiah chapter 53 as prophetic. They say it was written in Babylon by an anonymous author now known as Second Isaiah, whose work was later added to the older Book of Isaiah. Chapter 13 should be read as a continuation from verses 52:13-15, in which God speaks of his suffering servant. The Book of Isaiah originally did not have chapter breaks, and the decision to place the break after 52:15 was made by the Christian Church because it obscured the preceding text.In fact, this is called the fourth Servant Song. It is unclear whether, in this case, the author is spaking of one person or of the nation of Israel, but 52:14 talks of him in the same time period as the author, not as a person of the distant future. Read with the objective eye of a scholar, it can be seen that the author was talking about the troubles the people had sufferred in Babylon and an oracle for their future.However, Christian tradition has made this a prophecy of Jesus. Although that was not the intention of the author, this view would make Isaiah 53 a highly prophetic chapter.
There are two chapters that deals with the Resurrection. The first is found in Luke chapter 24, which tells of Jesus Resurrection. And the second is found in I Corinthians chapter 15, which teaches on the Christian's Resurrection.
Isaiah Osbourne was born on November 15, 1987.