Isaiah

Isaiah

by David W. Baker
Isaiah

Isaiah

by David W. Baker

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

Brimming with photos and graphics, the Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary walks you verse by verse through all the books of the New Testament. It’s like slipping on a set of glasses that lets you read the Bible through the eyes of a first-century reader! Discoveries await you that will snap the world of the New Testament into gripping immediacy. Things that seem mystifying, puzzling, or obscure will take on tremendous meaning when you view them in their ancient context. You'll deepen your understanding of the teachings of Jesus. You'll discover the close, sometimes startling interplay between God's kingdom and the practical affairs of the church. Best of all, you'll gain a deepened awareness of the Bible’s relevance for your life. Written in a clear, engaging style, this beautiful set provides a new and accessible approach that more technical expository and exegetical commentaries don't offer.

The Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentaryinvites you to enter the Old Testament with a company of guides, experts that will give new insights into these cherished writings.

Isaiah features include:
• Over 2000 photographs, drawings, maps, diagrams and charts to provide a visual feast that breathes fresh life into the text.
• Passage-by-passage commentary presenting archaeological findings, historical explanations, geographic insights, notes on manners and customs, and more.
• Analysis into the literature of the ancient Near East that will open your eyes to new depths of understanding both familiar and unfamiliar passages.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780310492092
Publisher: Zondervan Academic
Publication date: 05/11/2013
Series: Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary , #4
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 7.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.50(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John H. Walton (Ph D, Hebrew Union College) is professor emeritus of Old Testament at Wheaton College Graduate School. He is the author or coauthor of numerous books, including Old Testament Today, with Andrew E. Hill; volumes on Job and Genesis in the NIV Application Commentary series; the six-volume Lost World series; and Genesis 1 as Ancient Cosmology. He was also coeditor, with Craig Keener, of the ECPA 2017 Bible of the Year winner, the NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible.

Read an Excerpt

Isaiah

Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary
By David W. Baker

ZONDERVAN

Copyright © 2013 David W. Baker
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-310-49209-2


Chapter One

ISAIAH by David W. Baker

Introduction

Isaiah's magnificent prophecy spans not only history, going from creation (e.g., 42:5) to eternity (e.g., 9:7), but also geography, with an interest ranging between God's own people through all of humanity (e.g., 2:2). Containing both words of hope and horror, its key theme is God himself, who is referred to hundreds of times.

Isaiah prophesies during the latter half of the eighth century B.C. during the reign of four named kings (1:1). His prophecies do not simply concern his own era, however, but anticipate both horrifying and hopeful events in Judah's future. They describe a period of destruction and exile, with many of the people being deported far away from their own land, which will be ravaged and destroyed (586 B.C.). Some of Isaiah addresses the situation of exile (chs. 40–55). This is not the end, however, since the exiles will return and the land will be rebuilt (c. 535 B.C.); other sections of the book seem directed toward that situation (chs. 56–66).

The compositional history of Isaiah is debated, with numerous competing views as to the number of authors and the times of composition. This discussion is beyond the scope of the present study, but whichever view is espoused, the historical scope of the prophecy covers a period of over two centuries. Here we summarize the sweep of history between the eighth and fifth centuries B.C.

In the beginning of this period, Israel was controlled by Assyria, a major world power whose capital, Nineveh (Mosul in contemporary Iraq), is on the Tigris River, but whose empire in this period stretched from what is now Iran as far west as Egypt. Lying in the midst of major land routes between Assyria and Egypt, Israel felt repeatedly the horrors of war and destruction.

Just prior to the time of Isaiah, a succession of three Assyrian kings arose who were weaker and less aggressive than their predecessors, so Israel and Judah enjoyed relative peace and prosperity. This came to an abrupt end in 745 B.C. when a new and powerful king gained the Assyrian throne. Tiglath-pileser III (744–727 B.C.; 2 Kings 15:29; cf. 15:19, where he is called Pul) reinvigorated Assyrian expansion and aggression until the end of the Assyrian empire late in the following century. The northern kingdom of Israel faced more imminent external pressure. Her king, Jeroboam II, had just died and his dynasty was brought to an end by the assassination of his son Zechariah (2 Kings 15:8–12), followed by a rapid turnover of rulers, likely influenced by the Assyrian pressure (v. 19).

Uzziah, the king of Judah, also died (740 B.C.; Isa. 6:1), but his passing, though traumatic, was expected since he was suffering from an incapacitating skin disease and his son Jotham was effectively ruling in his place (2 Kings 15:5). Jotham's reign was not seriously affected by Assyria directly, but, ironically, by an alliance between Judah's sister nation, Israel under Pekah, with their northern neighbor Aram, under Rezin (15:37). These two allies wanted Judah to join their coalition against Assyria, though their actual motives are unstated; they were too small to oppose Assyria on their own.

Judah refused to do join the coalition, leading to the confrontation known as the Syro-Ephraimite War (Isa. 6–7; 2 Kings 16:5–9; 2 Chr. 28:5–21), which affected especially Ahaz, Jotham's son. He dithered back and forth on whether to side with Assyria, who was strong and brutal, or Israel and Aram, who were stronger than Judah and also close by. He finally opted for a pro-Assyrian policy, against the urgings of Isaiah (Isa. 7:7–9), and bribed Tiglath-pileser to leave him alone and instead deal with the opposing alliance, which the Assyrian king did in 734–732 (2 Kings 16:7–9).

When Tiglath-pileser died in 727 B.C., his subjects, including Hoshea, king of Israel, asserted their independence. His son and heir, Shalmaneser V (726–722 B.C.), besieged Samaria, the Israelite capital (2 Kings 17:4), and exiled its leaders under Sargon II (721–705 B.C.; vv. 5–6). In one of his annals he records: "I besieged and conquered Samaria, led away booty 27,290 inhabitants of it ... and imposed on them the tribute of the former king." In the period immediately after Sargon's death, while his son Sennacherib (704–681 B.C.) was occupied securing the throne, several of his vassals rebelled, requesting help from Ahaz's son and successor, Hezekiah (2 Kings 18:14–16; 715–687 B.C.).

Assyria proved too strong for any such alliance, moving against it in 701 B.C., conquering many and extracting tribute from them. Even so, Hezekiah did not join a coalition against them spearheaded by Philistia in 715–713, which was short-lived, with the Philistine capital, Ashdod, destroyed (Isa. 14:28–31; 20:1–6). Sennacherib proved able and reestablished control over Babylon and then turned in his third campaign against Hezekiah and the west in 701.7 He captured much of Judah, but was unable to take either Hezekiah or Jerusalem, possibly holding off because of payment of tribute. Sennacherib does boast: "He himself, I locked up within Jerusalem, his royal city, like a bird in a cage." While the Bible records the siege (2 Kings 18:17–19:9), it records no defeat, saying rather that the Assyrian forces unexpectedly withdrew (vv. 35–36).

Judah still remained under Assyrian control, who continued to demand service from Manasseh, Hezekiah's son and successor (687–642 B.C.; cf. 2 Chr. 33:11) as they were also battling in Egypt. Assyria started to weaken under the onslaught of their erstwhile vassals, the Scythians and the Medes, as well as the Babylonians, who expelled Assyria from their holdings in southern Mesopotamia in 625 B.C. under the leadership of Nabopolassar (626–605 B.C.). Allying with the Medes, he captured Assyria in 614 B.C., and the Assyrian capital, Nineveh, in 612 B.C. (Nahum; Zeph. 2:13–15). The seemingly overwhelming enemy was thus laid low, but not before great loss for Judah and the end of the nation of Israel.

Manasseh remained under Assyrian subservience under Sennacherib's able son, Esarhaddon (680–669). Since Egypt had been instrumental in fomenting repeated rebellions, Assyria turned her military attention toward her, going as far as destroying Thebes in 663 under the leadership of Ashurbanipal (668–627), Esarhaddon's son.

Pressures continued to rise against Assyria, not only from Egypt and Babylon, but also from the Indo-Aryans from the north, including the Medes. Upon Ashurbanipal's death, his successors were unable to maintain control, with Babylonia gaining self-rule in 626 under Nabopolassar. Joining with the Medes, Babylonia brought Assyria to its knees, destroying its capital, Nineveh, in 612 B.C. and destroying the Assyrian empire in 609.

During this period of weakness, Josiah (640–609 B.C.) won Judah's independence and reestablished worship of Israel's God. Josiah's son, Jehoiakim, was an Egyptian vassal, but in 605 the Babylonian ruler Nebuchadnezzar defeated the Egyptians at Carchemish. Jehoiakim changed his allegiance, but he soon rebelled and died during a Babylonian siege, leaving a desperate situation for his son, Jehoiachin. At age eighteen, Jehoiachin was faced with an overwhelming force surrounding his city, which fell three months later, with the young king taken into exile.

Babylon then enthroned her own puppet king, Mattaniah (Jehoiachin's uncle), renaming him Zedekiah, thus showing complete control over him. The prophet Jeremiah warned Zedekiah that any defiance of Babylon was futile, since God himself was turning against his own wayward people. The king did not listen, so after a two-year siege, Jerusalem fell in July, 586 B.C. The king was blinded and taken into exile along with many of the people; the temple and other important buildings were destroyed as were the very walls of the city, and Babylon placed Gedaliah, who was not even of royal birth, over Judah as governor. This looked like the end of God's own people.

This was not the case, however, since the Neo-Babylonian empire was itself short-lived. After its strongest and longest ruling king, Nebuchadnezzar (605–562), died, three inferior monarchs reigned, but in the meantime a coalition was forming in the east between the Medes and the Persians. Under the able leadership of Cyrus, their armies moved in and brought the Neo-Babylonian empire to an end in 539 B.C. This had a direct impact on the Judean exiles since the Persians exercised a different foreign policy from either the Assyrians or Babylonians. The latter had taken leading citizens of captured nations into exile far away from their homes in order to lower the chances of their trying to liberate their country. Persia, by contrast, left conquered people in their homeland, or, in the case of Judah, allowed those who desired to return to their native land.

Not every Israelite in Babylonian exile took advantage of the opportunity to return to Judah (Ezra 2:64–65 numbers the returnees at 49,897). Life in Babylon and Persia was economically good for many, allowing some to reach high office (e.g., Esther) and live in relative comfort. The returnees to Judah found life difficult, facing hostile neighbors and a daunting rebuilding task. The latter chapters in Isaiah apparently offer encouragement to such returnees.

Heading (1:1)

The vision (1:1). Most prophecies begin with a self-identification that can contain elements such as the type of literature, the identity of the prophet, and the time period. These indicate that they contain actual messages to a real audience addressing real-life issues they were facing. "Vision" is a form of divine revelation that did not necessarily involve the physical eyes, since here it involves primarily words rather than images (cf. 2:1). Prophets of Yahweh and pagan prophets experienced them. In Mesopotamia, even laypeople, both men and women, received visions or dreams from their gods.

Judah and Jerusalem (1:1). After the split of the nation of Israel into two parts following the reign of Solomon, the northern nation was known as "Israel" or "Ephraim" after its main tribe, with its capital in Samaria. The southern nation was "Judah" after the main tribe occupying the area. Its capital was Jerusalem, which was also the site of the national religious shrine, the temple of Yahweh.

Isaiah son of Amoz (1:1). In the ancient Near East a father's name commonly distinguished people with the same first name (cf. "Johnson"—son of John). This at times extended several generations, especially if an earlier ancestor had some claim to fame. Sometimes an earlier ancestor rather than the biological parent was used as an identifier.

Kings of Judah (1:1). Many Old Testament prophecies give their date either in relation to an important event or to the kings who ruled during a particular period. Similarly in Mesopotamia, documents are dated by using names of important officials, one of whose name was associated with each year. The Old Testament is often more general, simply providing the reigns, though at times a specific year identification is given. Dating was important because the events discussed are not some theoretical abstraction, but rather relate to real people at a specific time and place (see the chart of Judean kings in the introduction).

Courtroom Summons (1:2–31)

Hear, O heavens! Listen, O earth! (1:2). Ancient Near Eastern covenants include witnesses to testify regarding covenant breach or obedience and to bring about the required punishment or blessing. They also heard the indictment in a lawsuit brought against a covenant breaker. These witnesses among Israel's neighbors included deities and elements of nature, such as heaven and earth here (see Deut. 4:26; 30:19; 31:28) and things like mountains, rivers, sea, and clouds.

The ox knows his master, the donkey his owner's manger (1:3). Knowledgeable animals are proverbial. In their natural, untutored state, they know how to live and flourish in their environment. Egyptian wisdom acknowledges a dog as one recognizing its food source. This contrasts with humanity, according to Isaiah, which seemingly lacks this basic survival instinct, turning against the very Creator and the order of his created universe. A Hurro-Hittite wisdom text has a deer irrationally turning against the source of its provisions, but the writer explicitly acknowledges that he is writing metaphorically of humanity: "It is not a deer, but a human."

Israel (1:3). Deriving from the new name God conferred on Jacob (Gen. 32:28), "Israel" came to designate the people of all twelve tribes descended from him. When the nation divided after the reign of Solomon, the northern kingdom used that name, while the southern kingdom was known as Judah. But the term could still refer to Judah as it does here. It is therefore necessary to be careful in determining who "Israel" refers to.

Sinful nation (1:4). National sin is not only known of Israel but also her neighbors. The eighth-century Babylonian Myth of Erra and Ishum speaks of national destruction following humanity's abandoning the natural order ("A son will not ask for the health of his father, nor the father of his son. A mother will happily plot harm for her daughter") and departing from justice and righteousness. Divine abandonment of God's people follows their abandoning his established order.

Turned their backs (1:4). Turning one's back is an insulting sign of lack of interest and abandonment, in marked contrast to turning one's face toward someone in attention or obedience. Queen Hatshepsut showed dedication to her god by stating: "I did not turn my back to the city of the All-Lord, rather did I turn my face to it." Merneptah in the Merneptah Stele claimed that he was able to conquer Libya because the protective god "Seth turned his back upon their chief."

Whole heart afflicted (1:5). Heart pain can derive either from physical bruising, as is the case here, or psychological battering, as it is for a letter writer in Lachish who stated, "For your servant has been sick at heart ever since you sent [that letter]."

Not cleansed or bandaged or soothed with oil (1:6). These procedures aided healing for injuries. Oil was an important element for wound treatment. While treatment of maladies is less frequently mentioned than their diagnosis, an Old Babylonian letter requests: "Send me two measures of oil in a pot. A dog bit a man and I will bandage (him). Send the oil." An Akkadian text prescribes a treatment: "You wash him with water ... and afterward he bathes with soap and anoints himself with oil."

Your country is desolate, your cities burned with fire, your fields ... stripped (1:7). Conquerors often despoiled their captives either to provide for their own provisions while their army was on the move or to punish the conquered by making their land uninhabitable. This is shown physically by the number of burn levels found in archaeological excavations. The Babylonian Myth of Erra and Ishum describes similar punishments to those found here:

(II:52'–54') I shall finish off the land and count it as ruins. I shall devastate cities and make them a wilderness. I shall destroy mountains and fell their cattle.

(II:66'–68') I shall let wild beasts of the mountains go down (into cities), I shall devastate public places, wherever people tread. I shall let wild beasts of the countryside which are not ... come into the public square.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Isaiah by David W. Baker Copyright © 2013 by David W. Baker. Excerpted by permission of ZONDERVAN. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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