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The Book of Isaiah follows the Jews from their sinful, idolatrous life in Judah, into their punishment of Babylonian captivity, and back home again after their divine liberation.
"Anointed" as used in Isaiah 45:1 is translated into Hebrew as "messiah" and into Greek as "Christ". Although Christians tend to be quiet about this, the passage seems to assert that the Persian King Cyrus the Great is the messiah; the word "anointed" is used of several Jewish or Israelite figures, but Cyrus is the only foreigner so called.[1] Certain fringe Christians seem to associate prophecies about Cyrus with another leader obsessed with making things great, Donald Trump.[2]
Isaiah 7:14 contains the infamously disputed verse "Therefore the Lord himself will give you this sign: the עלמה shall be with child, and bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel." To this day, the question of whether the Biblical term 'almah above refers to a "young woman" or "girl" as in modern Hebrew or to a "virgin" (properly betulah in Hebrew) remains a divisive issue in Biblical translations.
“”2 prophets — 1 book!
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There are arguments that more than one author composed the book of Isaiah.
The first Isaiah, who probably wrote chapters 1-39, was a courtier and advisor in the court of King Hezekiah of Judah and several of his predecessors.
The second Isaiah, who takes over after Chapter 39, writes of the eventual restoration of a fallen Israelite nation and does not actually identify himself.
There are several reasons for such a conclusion:
We may never truly know, because the most recent transcript of Isaiah date to about 125 BCE,[5] about 475-575 years after Isaiah lived, which makes it impossible to tell if there were later additions or Isaiah was always one document.
That said, the consensus is for multiple authors. From the finders of the Dead Sea Scroll:[5]
Modern scholarship considers the Book of Isaiah to be an anthology, the two principal compositions of which are the Book of Isaiah proper (chapters 1-39, with some exceptions), containing the words of the prophet Isaiah himself, dating from the time of the First Temple, around 700 BCE, and Second Isaiah (Deutero-Isaiah, chapters 40-66), comprising the words of an anonymous prophet, who lived some one hundred and fifty years later, around the time of the Babylonian exile and the restoration of the Temple in the Persian Period. By the time our Isaiah Scroll was copied (the last third of the second century BCE), the book was already regarded as a single composition.
A similar view is held by the Catholic Church, which states that it was compiled by later 'disciples of Isaiah'.[6]
Almost all modern scholars agree that Isaiah was written in three sections, though some break it into four.[3]
Three divisions:
Four divisions:
Despite this broad scholarly consensus, many Biblical literalists still assert that Isaiah 45 predicted that Cyrus will conquer Babylon, 150 years before the event. Isaiah 45 was likely written near or after 537 BCE,[7] right about the time of Cyrus' conquest making this "prediction" very weak.
The fact that Cyrus is mentioned by name is usually brought up as further evidence. How could people 150 years earlier know that a king named Cyrus would be born and save them? The answer is, again, that they didn't; they knew him by name because they wrote at a time when he existed.
Strangely, Christians tend to prefer the less simple solution of miracles over the simpler and commoner one of literary synthesis, as if the Bible's "accuracy" could somehow shore up their faith.
Where Christians might leap to the "miraculous" prophetic explanation for the match between the "prophecy" and such real historical facts, normal historians see the same match and conclude that the more likely explanation is that "Isaiah" was writing with the benefit of hindsight, especially given that we actually have no record of the Book of Isaiah predating these events.
The Talmud[8] states that the book of Isaiah was written by 'King Hezechaiah and his attendants'.
The Intertextuality of the Markan text and Isaiah has been recognized by many scholars.[9][10]. Some of the Isaiah chapters alluded to in the Gospel of Mark are:
Chapter : Interpretation by Markan author[10]
Isaiah 49:6 states, "thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the earth".[11] The words "my salvation" would likely be used by the Markan author as an intertextual prophecy foretelling Jesus (whose name means Yahweh's salvation). However some scholars hold that the name "Jesus" may derive from the name "Isaiah" or "Joshua" (as per the Greek LXX) or even "Jason"—a god and hero in Hellenistic Greek culture.[12][13]
The book of Isaiah has a large amount to say on social justice; this sort of sentiment is something neglected by many conservative Christians, who tend to focus on the exclusionary parts of the Bible. For example, Isaiah 58:6-10 gives the following poem as an instruction from God:
6 "Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen: / to loose the chains of injustice / and untie the cords of the yoke, / to set the oppressed free / and break every yoke?
7 Is it not to share your food with the hungry / and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter— / when you see the naked, to clothe him, / and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?
8 Then your light will break forth like the dawn, / and your healing will quickly appear; / then your righteousness [a] will go before you, / and the glory of the LORD will be your rear guard.
9 Then you will call, and the LORD will answer; / you will cry for help, and he will say: Here am I. / "If you do away with the yoke of oppression, / with the pointing finger and malicious talk,
10 and if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry / and satisfy the needs of the oppressed, / then your light will rise in the darkness, / and your night will become like the noonday.
Isaiah is described in the book 2 Kings. (Chapters 15-16 are copied from Jeremiah 48, and chapters 36-39 are copied from 2 Kings 18:13-20:19. Or could it be the other way around?)
1980s Christian heavy metal band Stryper often referred to Isaiah 53:5 on their album covers.
The text of The Messiah by Handel is taken from Isaiah, and regardless of your religious beliefs is a sweet piece of composition.