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Isaiah: Unity, Structure, and Prophecies - A Study of the First Major Prophet, Lecture notes of Religious Studies

Explore the book of isaiah, from its authorship to its structure and key concepts. Discover the prophecies against various nations and the role of the messiah. Understand the historical background and the significance of the oracles of judgment and redemption.

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Outline of Isaiah
The book of Isaiah is the first of the so-called “major prophets” because of its size. The
others are Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel. There are 12 “minor prophets” after Daniel in the OT.
Unfortunately, one of the first issues that comes up in studies of Isaiah has to do with
authorship. Did one real prophet Isaiah write the book, or were there two or even three authors
whose works were combined at a later date? One can read pages and pages on this subject but it
boils down to this simple question: do you believe in the inspiration and inerrancy of the
Scripture? If so, then this data will suffice to show you the unity of the book of Isaiah:
NT Reference
Isaiah Quotation
NT Reference
Isaiah Quotation
Matt. 1:22
Isa. 7:14
John 1:23
Isa. 40:3
Matt. 3:3
Isa. 40:3
John 12:38
Isa. 53:1
Matt. 4:14
Isa. 9:1-2
John 12:39
Isa. 6:9-10
Matt. 8:17
Isa. 53:4
Acts 8:28, 30, 32-33
Isa. 53:7-8
Matt. 12:17
Isa. 42:1-4
Acts 28:25
Isa. 6:9-10
Matt 13:14
Isa. 6:9-10
Rom. 9:27, 29
Isa. 10:22-23, 28:22, 1:9
Matt. 15:7
Isa. 29:13
Rom. 10:16
Isa. 53:1
Mark 7:6
Isa. 29:13
Rom. 10:20
Isa. 65:1
Luke 3:4
Isa. 40:3-5
Rom. 15:12
Isa. 11:1, 10
Luke 4:17
Isa. 48:8-9
Matt. 21:4
Isa. 62:11
Since the NT quotes from Isaiah chapters 1, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 28, 29, 40, 42, 48, 53, 62, and
65 and ascribes all of these to Isaiah, we can be certain that Isaiah wrote the book! Of course,
even easier would be to just look in the book of Isaiah itself, where his name is used 16 times.
It is often noted that there is a major division in the book at chapters 39/40, and since the
whole book has 66 chapters, 39 before the division and 27 after, the book mirrors the structure of
the whole Bible which has 66 books, 39 in OT, 27 in NT. The first section seems to focus on
judgment and the second on redemption, deliverance, and blessing. The following from R. Bruce
Compton (Course Outline, 106 Bible Exposition, Isaiah, Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary,
Spring 1998) gives a high-level overview of the book, which we will develop at further length as
we proceed in the study of Isaiah’s prophecy.
I. BOOK OF JUDGMENT....................................................................... 139
A. Prophecies concerning Judah and Jerusalem ............................112
B. Oracles of judgment against the nations .................................1323
C. Prophecies of world-wide judgment and deliverance .............2427
D. Oracles of woe against Samaria, Jerusalem, and Assyria .......2833
E. Prophecies of world-wide judgment and deliverance ............. 3435
F. Historical interlude and transition...........................................3639
II. BOOK OF COMFORT .......................................................................4066
A. Prophecies of redemption and restoration...............................4048
B. Prophecies involving God’s Servant the Messiah...................4955
C. Prophecies of condemnation and consummation....................5666
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Outline of Isaiah The book of Isaiah is the first of the so-called “major prophets” because of its size. The others are Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel. There are 12 “minor prophets” after Daniel in the OT. Unfortunately, one of the first issues that comes up in studies of Isaiah has to do with authorship. Did one real prophet Isaiah write the book, or were there two or even three authors whose works were combined at a later date? One can read pages and pages on this subject but it boils down to this simple question: do you believe in the inspiration and inerrancy of the Scripture? If so, then this data will suffice to show you the unity of the book of Isaiah: NT Reference Isaiah Quotation NT Reference Isaiah Quotation Matt. 1:22 Isa. 7:14 John 1:23 Isa. 40: Matt. 3:3 Isa. 40:3 John 12:38 Isa. 53: Matt. 4:14 Isa. 9:1- 2 John 12:39 Isa. 6:9- 10 Matt. 8:17 Isa. 53:4 Acts 8:28, 30, 32- 33 Isa. 53:7- 8 Matt. 12:17 Isa. 42:1- 4 Acts 28:25 Isa. 6:9- 10 Matt 13:14 Isa. 6:9- 10 Rom. 9:27, 29 Isa. 10:22-23, 28:22, 1: Matt. 15:7 Isa. 29:13 Rom. 10:16 Isa. 53: Mark 7:6 Isa. 29:13 Rom. 10:20 Isa. 65: Luke 3:4 Isa. 40:3- 5 Rom. 15:12 Isa. 11:1, 10 Luke 4:17 Isa. 48:8- 9 Matt. 21:4 Isa. 62: Since the NT quotes from Isaiah chapters 1, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 28, 29, 40, 42, 48, 53, 62, and 65 and ascribes all of these to Isaiah, we can be certain that Isaiah wrote the book! Of course, even easier would be to just look in the book of Isaiah itself, where his name is used 16 times. It is often noted that there is a major division in the book at chapters 39/40, and since the whole book has 66 chapters, 39 before the division and 27 after, the book mirrors the structure of the whole Bible which has 66 books, 39 in OT, 27 in NT. The first section seems to focus on judgment and the second on redemption, deliverance, and blessing. The following from R. Bruce Compton (Course Outline, 106 Bible Exposition, Isaiah, Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary, Spring 1998) gives a high-level overview of the book, which we will develop at further length as we proceed in the study of Isaiah’s prophecy. I. BOOK OF JUDGMENT....................................................................... 1 − 39 A. Prophecies concerning Judah and Jerusalem ............................ 1 − 12 B. Oracles of judgment against the nations ................................. 13 − 23 C. Prophecies of world-wide judgment and deliverance ............. 24 − 27 D. Oracles of woe against Samaria, Jerusalem, and Assyria ....... 28 − 33 E. Prophecies of world-wide judgment and deliverance ............. 34 − 35 F. Historical interlude and transition ........................................... 36 − 39 II. BOOK OF COMFORT ....................................................................... 40 − 66 A. Prophecies of redemption and restoration............................... 40 − 48 B. Prophecies involving God’s Servant the Messiah................... 49 − 55 C. Prophecies of condemnation and consummation .................... 56 − 66

One concept that is important to understand in Isaiah is that of the ‘oracle’ or ‘burden.’ It signifies a ‘pronouncement’ and is prophetic of events that will certainly occur. It is used 11 times in chapters 13-23 (and 3 other times in the book) where there are a total of 14 prophecies against the peoples of various geographical regions. The same word is used for a load that may be borne on an ox or other beast of burden. You can see how a prophetic oracle would be a heavy load, not only for the prophet, but for the recipients to bear. For instance, “the burden of Babylon” in 13:1 can be translated “the pronouncement or prophecy concerning or against Babylon.” Of similar import is the word ‘woe’ which occurs 21 times in the book. We ought to be able to see from this that the Bible is not always full of good news! Historical Background Assyrian Kings

  1. Tiglath Pileser III, 745 – 727 B.C. Conqueror of ANE; forced tribute on Israel under Menahem (2 Kings 15:19ff). Israel and Syria united against Tiglath to throw off his rule; Ahaz of Judah would not go along with their union so they turned against him (2 Kings 15:37; 16:5; Isa. 7:1). Ahaz did not trust the Lord at this juncture but turned to Assyria for help (2 Kings 16:7-9).
  2. Shalmaneser V, 727 – 722 B.C., son of Tiglath. At the succession of Shalmaneser, many states that were subjugated under his father revolted; he therefore had to re-establish dominance over them. By 722 B.C., he had defeated Samaria, deported its population, and re-populated it with loyal subjects. Thus the northern kingdom was destroyed (2 Kings 17:1-23).
  3. Sargon II, 722 – 705 B.C. Again revolts had to be put down; Egypt was conquered. Hezekiah declared independence from Assyria but later was forced to change his mind.
  4. Sennacherib – 705 – 681 B.C. Babylon, Judah, and Egypt revolted. Hezekiah joined with Egypt (Isa. 30-31). Jerusalem was miraculously spared seeming certain defeat (Isa. 37:36).
  5. Esar-haddon – 681 – 668 B.C. The Book of Judgment I. Prophecies concerning Judah and Jerusalem ........................................ 1 − 12 A. Court case against Judah and Jerusalem .................................1:1- 31 B. Millennial blessing ....................................................................2:1- 4 C. Judgment against Judah..........................................................2:5-4: D. Millennial blessing .................................................................4:2-4: E. Judgment against Judah...........................................................5:1- 30 F. Isaiah’s commissioning (740 B.C.) .........................................6:1- 13 G. Near-term deliverance from Syria and Israel .......................7:1-8:

The Book of Comfort I. Prophecies of redemption and restoration........................................... 40 − 48 A. Comfort from the Almighty God .....................................40:1-41: B. The Servant of the LORD .....................................................42:1- 25 C. The superiority of God, Israel’s redeemer, to Idols .........43:1-44: D. Deliverance from captivity....................................................45:1- 25 E. Judgment against Babylon ...............................................46:1-47: F. The stubbornness of Israel and their deliverance ..................48:1- 22 II. Prophecies involving God’s Servant the Messiah ............................... 49 − 55 A. The Servant and Restoration .................................................49:1- 26 B. The suffering Servant ............................................................50: 1 - 11 C. Deliverance to Zion..........................................................51:1-52: D. The suffering and glory of the servant ..........................52:13-53: E. Restoration of Israel ..............................................................54:1- 17 F. Call to repentance and blessing.............................................55:1- 13 III. Prophecies of condemnation and consummation ................................ 56 − 66 A. Promises to the just .................................................................56:1- 8 B. Condemnation of the wicked............................................56:9-57: C. Proper observance of the law ................................................58:1- 14 D. Iniquities of Israel..................................................................59:1- 21 E. Glory of Zion....................................................................60:1-62: F. Judgment of God .....................................................................63:1- 6 G. Prayer for Deliverance .....................................................63:7-64: H. Condemnation and Deliverance .......................................65:1-66: Notes The Sennacherib Prism is A 15-inch tall, six-sided baked clay prism from ancient Assyria contains the story of the invasion of the kingdom of Judah by Sennacherib in 701 B.C. The prism was found at Nineveh. King Sennacherib of Assyria is mentioned in 2 Kings 18- 19. Isaiah prophesied that God would protect Jerusalem against attack by Sennacherib (Is. 36- 37 , 2 Chron. 32). While the prism does say that the Assyrians trapped Hezekiah in Jerusalem “like a bird in a cage,” like the biblical record, it says nothing of them conquering the city. The Bible says that God spared Jerusalem. The prism, together with the Lachish reliefs and excavations, adds detail to the biblical account. King Hezekiah prayed to the Lord. Isaiah brought him God' s message.That night the Lord smote 185,000 Assyrians, and Sennacherib went back to Nineveh and later was killed by his sons (Isaiah 37:35- 38 ). See http://www.myfortress.org/archaeology.html. Also, Gleason L. Archer, A Survey of Old Testament Introduction , Revised and Expanded, Chicago: Moody Press, 1994.