A lion I think.
Male lions sleep for 20 hours a day, are horrible hunters even at night, female lions do all the work, and the head of a pride not only forces the females to do all the hunting for him, but lions are also known rapists of the animal kingdom forcing lionesses to mate even against their will. Moreover, a given head of a lion pride will keep a harem of up to 10 lionesses all for himself.
"Its good to be the king."
Sorry I just had to say it.
Thanks for describing my family, my particular group of Hebrews in that manner Isaiah really apreciate it. I don't feel insulted in being called a lazy rapist or anything. That is the actual scientific truth about lions; a lion, is basically a lazy rapist. All members of the cat family, the males have thorns at the end of their penis designed to scrap the uterus of the female to stimulate ovulation, meaning, for female cats mating is exceedingly painful. While most cats are able to throw off the male following a yelp of pain, Lions are so strong that even as a lioness screams in pain, a male lion will hold her down, and remain in the female, for up to 10 hours just humping away.
That is why in ancient times, if a man was virile he was called a "lion."
Indeed, Jewish feminists have accused King David of in fact raping Bathsheba for years now.
Like I said Isaiah, THANK you (sarcasm mine) SO MUCH, really apreciate that.
Starting in Isaiah 1:1 the book addresses Judah and Jerusalem with warnings and prophecies from the time of King Uzziah (740 B.C.) to the time of Hezekiah (681 B.C.) leading up to the Babylonian captivity.
No. The monarchy was in power.
Isaiah primarily preached in the southern kingdom of Judah.
Samuel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Elijah.See also:More about the Israelite prophets
He lived in Jerusalem, in the kingdom of Judah.
Isaiah 1:1 == 1The vision of Isaiah the son of Amoz, which he saw concerning Judah and Jerusalem in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah.
Answer, Never.
The main characters in The Book of Isaiah are the prophet Isaiah, King Ahaz, King Hezekiah, and the people of Judah and Jerusalem. Isaiah prophesies about the coming judgment on Israel, the restoration of God's people, and the future Messiah.
Isaiah did not mention Jesus or any other prophets. First Isaiah stated that he wrote about that which he saw "concerning Judah and Jerusalem in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah." In other words, he was not prophesying nor foreseeing the future.
Isaiah served under 4 kings as a prophet. In his notes on Isaiah in his Study Bible, John MacArthur says:- Isaiah, son of Amoz, ministered in and around Jerusalem as a prophet to Judah during the reigns of 4 kings of Judah: Uzziah (called "Azariah" in 2 Kings), Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah (1:1) from ca. 739-686BC.
Isaiah was a prophet who lived during the 8th-century B.C. in the Kingdom of Judah before it fell to the Babylonians. Isaiah is credited as the author of the book by the same name in the Bible and often quoted in the New Testament.
Isaiah was born in Jerusalem.