Book of Isaiah
The Book of Isaiah is the first of the Latter Prophets in the Hebrew Bible and the first of the major prophets in the Christian Old Testament. It is identified by a superscription as the words of the 8th-century BCE prophet Isaiah ben Amoz, but there is evidence that much of it was composed during the Babylonian captivity and later.
Johann Christoph Döderlein suggested in 1775 that the book contained the works of two prophets separated by more than a century, and Bernhard Duhm originated the view, held as a consensus through most of the 20th century, that the book comprises three separate collections of oracles: Proto-Isaiah, containing the words of the 8th-century BCE prophet Isaiah; Deutero-Isaiah, or "the Book of Consolation",, the work of an anonymous 6th-century BCE author writing during the Exile; and Trito-Isaiah, composed after the return from Exile. Isaiah 1–33 promises judgment and restoration for Judah, Jerusalem and the nations, and chapters 34–66 presume that judgment has been pronounced and restoration follows soon. While few scholars today attribute the entire book, or even most of it, to one person, the book's essential unity has become a focus in more recent research.
The book can be read as an extended meditation on the destiny of Jerusalem into and after the Exile. The Deutero-Isaian part of the book describes how God will make Jerusalem the centre of his worldwide rule through a royal saviour who will destroy the oppressor ; this messiah is the king Cyrus the Great of Persia, who founded the Achaemenid Empire, who is merely the agent who brings about Yahweh's kingship. Christians interpret passages of Isaiah as messianic prophecies of Jesus.
Isaiah speaks out against corrupt leaders and for the disadvantaged, and roots righteousness in God's holiness rather than in Israel's covenant.
Isaiah was one of the most popular works among Jews in the Second Temple period. In Christian circles, it was held in such high regard as to be called "the Fifth Gospel", and its influence extends beyond Christianity to English literature and to Western culture in general, from the libretto of Handel's Messiah to a host of such everyday phrases as "swords into ploughshares", "shelter from the storm" and "voice in the wilderness".
Structure
General scholarly consensus through most of the 20th century saw three separate collections of oracles in the book of Isaiah. A typical outline based on this understanding of the book sees its underlying structure in terms of the identification of historical figures who might have been their authors:- 1–39: Proto-Isaiah, containing the words of the original Isaiah;
- 40–55: Deutero-Isaiah, the work of an anonymous Exilic author;
- 56–66: Trito-Isaiah, an anthology of about twelve passages.
- 1–33: Warnings of judgment and promises of subsequent restoration for Jerusalem, Judah and the nations;
- 34–66: Judgment has already taken place and restoration is at hand.
Summary
- The book opens by setting out the themes of judgment and subsequent restoration for the righteous. God has a plan which will be realised on the "Day of Yahweh", when Jerusalem will become the centre of his worldwide rule. On that day the world will come to Zion for instruction, but first the city must be punished and cleansed of evil. Israel is invited to join in this plan. Chapters 5–12 explain the significance of the Assyrian judgment against Israel: righteous rule by the Davidic king will follow after the arrogant Assyrian monarch is brought down. Chapters 13–27 announce the preparation of the nations for Yahweh's world rule; chapters 28–33 announce that a royal saviour will emerge in the aftermath of Jerusalem's punishment and the destruction of her oppressor.
- The oppressor is about to fall. Chapters 34–35 tell how Yahweh will return the redeemed exiles to Jerusalem. Chapters 36–39 tell of the faithfulness of king Hezekiah to Yahweh during the Assyrian siege as a model for the restored community. Chapters 40–54 state that the restoration of Zion is taking place because Yahweh, the creator of the universe, has designated the Persian king Cyrus the Great as the promised messiah and temple-builder. Specifically, Chapter 53 predicts a suffering servant who will be the messiah the prophet speaks of in previous verses. Chapters 55–66 are an exhortation to Israel to keep the covenant. God's eternal promise to David is now made to the people of Israel/Judah at large. The book ends by enjoining righteousness as the final stages of God's plan come to pass, including the pilgrimage of the nations to Zion and the realisation of Yahweh's kingship.
- Proto-Isaiah/'First Isaiah :
- * 1–12: Oracles against Judah mostly from Isaiah's early years;
- * 13–23: Oracles against foreign nations from his middle years;
- * 24–27: The "Isaiah Apocalypse", added at a much later date;
- * 28–33: Oracles from Isaiah's later ministry
- * 34–35: A vision of Zion, perhaps a later addition;
- * 36–39: Stories of Isaiah's life, some from the Book of Kings
- Deutero-Isaiah/Second Isaiah, with two major divisions, 40–48 and 49–55, the first emphasizing Israel, the second Zion and Jerusalem:
- * An introduction and conclusion stressing the power of God's word over everything;
- * A second introduction and conclusion within these in which a herald announces salvation to Jerusalem;
- * Fragments of hymns dividing various sections;
- * The role of foreign nations, the fall of Babylon, and the rise of Cyrus as God's chosen one;
- * Four "servant songs" personalising the message of the prophet;
- * Several longer poems on topics such as God's power and invitations to Israel to trust in him;
- Trito-Isaiah/Third Isaiah' :
- * A collection of oracles by unknown prophets in the years immediately after the return from Babylon.
Composition
Authorship
While it is widely accepted that the book of Isaiah is rooted in a historic prophet called Isaiah, who lived in the Kingdom of Judah during the 8th century BCE, it is also widely accepted that this prophet did not write the entire book of Isaiah.- Historical situation: Chapters 40–55 presuppose that Jerusalem has already been destroyed and the Babylonian exile is already in effect – they speak from a present in which the Exile is about to end. Chapters 56–66 assume an even later situation, in which the people are already returned to Jerusalem and the rebuilding of the Temple is already under way.
- Anonymity: Isaiah's name suddenly stops being used after chapter 39.
- Style: There is a sudden change in style and theology after chapter 40; numerous key words and phrases found in one section are not found in the other.
Historical context
The historic Isaiah ben Amoz lived in the Kingdom of Judah during the reigns of four kings from the mid to late 8th-century BCE. During this period, the Neo-Assyrian Empire was expanding westward from its origins in Upper Mesopotamia towards the Mediterranean, destroying first Aram-Damascus in 734–732 BCE, then the Kingdom of Israel in 722–721, and finally subjugating Judah in 701.Proto-Isaiah is divided between verse and prose passages, and a currently popular theory is that the verse passages represent the prophecies of the original 8th-century Isaiah, while the prose sections are "sermons" on his texts composed at the court of Josiah a hundred years later, at the end of the 7th century.
The conquest of Jerusalem by the Neo-Babylonian Empire and the exile of its elite in 586 BCE, the "Babylonian captivity", ushered in the next stage in the formation of the book. Deutero-Isaiah addresses himself to the Jews in exile, offering them the hope of return. This was the period of the meteoric rise of Persis under Cyrus the Great; in 559 BCE, he succeeded his father as ruler of a small vassal kingdom in what is now eastern Iran, and by 540 he ruled the Achaemenid Empire, which stretched from the Mediterranean to Central Asia, and in 539, he conquered Babylon, ending the Neo-Babylonian Empire. Deutero-Isaiah's predictions of the imminent fall of Babylon and his glorification of Cyrus as the deliverer of Israel date his prophecies to 550–539 BCE, and probably towards the end of this period.
The Persians ended the Jewish exile, and by 515 BCE, the exiles, or at least some of them, had returned to Jerusalem and rebuilt the Temple. The return, however, was not without problems: the returnees found themselves in conflict with those who had remained in the country and who now owned the land, and there were further conflicts over the form of government that should be set up. This background forms the context of Trito-Isaiah.
Themes
Overview
The Book of Isaiah focuses on the main role of Jerusalem in God's plan for the world, seeing centuries of history as though they were all the single vision of the 8th-century prophet Isaiah.- Proto-Isaiah speaks of Israel's desertion of God and what will follow: Israel will be destroyed by foreign enemies, but after the people, the country and Jerusalem are punished and purified, a remnant of Israel will live in God's place in Zion, governed by God's chosen king, under the presence and protection of God.
- Deutero-Isaiah has as its subject the liberation of Israel from captivity in Babylon in another Exodus, which the God of Israel will arrange using Cyrus, the Persian conqueror, as his agent.
- Trito-Isaiah concerns Jerusalem, the Temple, the Sabbath, and Israel's salvation..