Chapter One
The Lord Is Salvation
(Introduction to Isaiah)
Sir Winston Churchill was once asked to give the qualifications a person needed in order to succeed in politics, and he replied: âIt is the ability to foretell what is going to happen tomorrow, next week, next month, and next year. And to have the ability afterwards to explain why it didnât happen.â
Because Godâs prophets were correct all of the time, they didnât have to explain away their mistakes. âIf what a prophet proclaims in the name of the LORD does not take place or come true,â wrote Moses, âthat is a message the LORD has not spokenâ (Deut. 18:22 NIV). âTo the law and to the testimony,â wrote Isaiah, âif they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in themâ (8:20). Isaiah was a man who had Godâs light, and he was not afraid to let it shine.
Before we examine the text of Isaiahâs prophecy, letâs get acquainted with the background of the book so that we can better understand the man and his times.
THE MAN
The name Isaiah means âsalvation of the Lord,â and salvation (deliverance) is the key theme of his book. He wrote concerning five different acts of deliverance that God would perform: (1) the deliverance of Judah from Assyrian invasion (chaps. 36â37); (2) the deliverance of the nation from Babylonian captivity (chap. 40); (3) the future deliverance of the Jews from worldwide dispersion among the Gentiles (chaps. 11â12); (4) the deliverance of lost sinners from judgment (chap. 53); and (5) the final deliverance of creation from the bondage of sin when the kingdom is established (chaps. 60; 66:17ff.).
There were other Jewish men named Isaiah, so the prophet identified himself seven times as âthe son of Amoz,â not to be confused with âAmosâ (see 1:1; 2:1; 13:1; 20:2; 37:2, 21; 38:1). Isaiah was married, and his wife was called âthe prophetessâ (8:3), either because she was married to a prophet or because she shared the prophetic gift. He fathered two sons whose names have prophetic significance: Shearjashub (âa remnant shall return,â 7:3) and Maher-shalal-hash-baz (âquick to plunder, swift to the spoil,â 8:1â4, 18). The two names speak of the nationâs judgment and restoration, two important themes in Isaiahâs prophecy.
Isaiah was called to his ministry âin the year that King Uzziah diedâ (6:1), which was 739 BC. Isaiah ministered through the reigns of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, who died in 686. Tradition says that Manasseh, King Hezekiahâs successor, killed Isaiah by having him sawn in half (Heb. 11:37), but there is no record of this in Scripture.
What kind of man was Isaiah the prophet? As you read his prophecy, you will discover that he was a man in touch with God. He saw Godâs Son and Godâs glory (chap. 6; John 12:41), he heard Godâs message, and he sought to bring the nation back to God before it was too late.
Isaiah was a man who loved his nation. The phrase âmy peopleâ is used at least twenty-six times in his book. He was a patriot with a true love for his country, pleading with Judah to return to God and warning kings when their foreign policy was contrary to Godâs will. The American political leader Adlai Stevenson called patriotism ânot a short and frenzied outburst of emotion, but the tranquil and steady dedication of a life.â He was not thinking of Isaiah when he said that, but Stevensonâs words perfectly describe the prophet and his work.
He was also a man who hated sin and sham religion. His favorite name for God is âthe Holy One of Israel,â and he uses it twenty-five times in his book. (It is used only five times in the rest of the Old Testament.) He looked at the crowded courts of the temple and cried out, âThey have forsaken the LORD, they have provoked the Holy One of Israel unto anger, they are gone away backwardâ (1:4). He examined the political policies of the leaders and said, âWoe to them that go down to Egypt for help ⊠but they look not unto the Holy One of Israel, neither seek the LORD!â (31:1). Jehovah was holy, but the nation was sinful, and Isaiah called the people to repent.
Isaiah was certainly a courageous man. Unafraid to denounce kings and priests, and unwavering when public opinion went against him, he boldly declared the Word of God. For three years Isaiah wore only a loincloth to dramatize the victory of Assyria over Egypt (chap. 20). In so doing, he hoped to get the attention of people who were blind to their countryâs danger.
He was a man skilled in communicating Godâs truth. Not content with merely declaring facts, Isaiah clothed those facts in striking language that would catch the attention of a people blind and deaf to spiritual truth (6:9â10). He compared the nation to a diseased body (1:5â6), a harlot (v. 21), a useless vineyard (chap. 5), a bulging wall about to fall down (30:13), and a woman in travail (66:8). Assyria, the enemy, would come like a swollen stream (8:7â8), a swarm of bees (7:18), a lion (5:29), and an axe (10:15). Like our Lord Jesus Christ, Isaiah knew how to stir the imagination of his listeners so that he might arouse their interest and teach them Godâs truth (Matt. 13:10â17).
THE MONARCHS
Isaiah prophesied during the days of âUzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judahâ (1:1). The nation had divided after the death of Solomon (1 Kings 12), but the priesthood and the Davidic throne belonged to Judah. The ten northern tribes formed the kingdom of Israel (Ephraim), with Samaria as its capital city, and Benjamin and Judah united to form the kingdom of Judah, with Jerusalem as its capital city. Though Isaiah predicted the fall of Israel to Assyria (chap. 28), which occurred in 722 BC, his major focus was on Judah and Jerusalem (1:1).
Uzziah is also called Azariah. At the age of sixteen, he became coregent with his father, Amaziah, and was on the throne for fifty-two years (792â740). When his father was assassinated in 767, Uzziah became the sole ruler and brought the nation to its greatest days since David and Solomon (2 Kings 14:17â22; 15:1â7; 2 Chron. 26:1â15). âBut when he was strong, his heart was lifted up to his destructionâ (2 Chron. 26:16). He tried to intrude into the priestâs ministry in the temple, and God judged him by smiting him with leprosy. It was in the year that King Uzziah died that Isaiah was called to minister (Isa. 6:1).
Jotham was coregent after his father became a leper, and his record as king was a good one (2 Kings 15:32â38; 2 Chron. 27). He reigned for twenty years, and it was during his time that the Assyrian Empire began to emerge as a new and threatening power. During the last twelve years of Jothamâs reign, his son Ahaz served as coregent, but Ahaz was not one of Judahâs good kings.
Ahaz forged political alliances that eventually brought Judah into bondage to Assyria (2 Kings 16; 2 Chron. 28). Judah was repeatedly threatened by Egypt from the south and by Syria and Israel from the north, and Ahaz depended on an alliance with Assyria to protect himself. Isaiah warned Ahaz that his alliances with godless Gentiles would not work, and he encouraged the king to put his trust in the Lord (Isa. 7).
Hezekiah reigned forty-two years and was one of Judahâs greatest kings (2 Kings 18â20; 2 Chron. 29â32). He not only strengthened the city of Jerusalem and the nation of Judah, but led the people back to the Lord. He built the famous water system that still exists in Jerusalem.
The ministry of Isaiah spans a period of over fifty years, from 739 BC (the death of Uzziah) to 686 BC (the death of Hezekiah), and it probably extended into the early years of King Manassehâs reign. It was a difficult time of international upheaval, when first one power and then another threatened Judah. But the greatest dangers were not outside the nation: They were within. In spite of the godly leadership of King Hezekiah, Judah had no more godly kings. One by one, Hezekiahâs successors led the nation into political and spiritual decay, ending in captivity in Babylon.
The British expositor G. Campbell Morgan said, âThe whole story of the prophet Isaiah, as it is revealed to us in this one book, is that of a man who spoke to an inattentive age or to an age which, if attentive, mocked him and refused to obey his message, until, as the prophetic period drew to a close, he inquired in anguish, âWho hath believed our report? And to whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed?ââ (Westminster Pulpit, vol. 10, p. 10)
THE MESSAGE
Isaiah opened his book with a series of sermons denouncing sin: the personal sins of the people (chaps. 1â6) and the national sins of the leaders (chaps. 7â12). In these messages, he warned of judgment and pled for repentance. The prophets Amos and Hosea were preaching similar messages to the people of the northern kingdom, warning them that time was running out.
But the Gentile nations around Judah and Israel were not innocent! In chapters 13â23, Isaiah denounced those nations for their sins and warned of Godâs judgment. Israel and Judah had sinned against the law of God and were even more guilty than their neighbors, but the Gentile nations would not escape Godâs wrath. In the way they had behaved, these nations had sinned against conscience (Rom. 2:1â16) and against human decency. The prophet Amos was preaching the same message in the northern kingdom, but he denounced the Gentiles first and then warned the Jews (Amos 1â2).
As you study the book of Isaiah, you will discover that the prophet interspersed messages of hope with words of judgment. God remembers His mercy even when declaring His wrath (Hab. 3:2), and He assures His people that they have a âhope and a futureâ (Jer. 29:11 NIV). Isaiah 24â27 is devoted to âsongs of hopeâ that describe the glory of the future kingdom. Isaiah saw a day when the two kingdoms of Israel and Judah would return to the land, be reunited and redeemed, and enter into the blessings of the promised kingdom.
Chapters 28â35 focus on the impending Assyrian invasion of Israel and Judah. Israel would be destroyed and the ten tribes assimilated into the Assyrian Empire. (This is the origin of the Samaritans, who were part Jewish and part Gentile.) Judah would be invaded and devastated, but Jerusalem would be delivered by the Lord.
At this point in his book, Isaiah moved from prophecy to history and focused on two key events that occurred during the reign of King Hezekiah: Godâs miraculous deliverance of Jerusalem from the Assyrians (chaps. 36â37), and Hezekiahâs foolish cooperation with the Babylonians (chaps. 38â39). This section forms a transition from an emphasis on Assyria to an emphasis on Babylon, for the last twenty-seven chapters look ahead to the return of the Jewish remnant from Babylonian captivity.
The Jewish rabbis call Isaiah 40â66 âThe Book of Consolation,â and their description is accurate. Addressed originally to the discouraged Jewish exiles returning to an impoverished land and a ruined temple, these chapters have brought comfort and hope to Godâs people in every age and in every kind of difficult situation. The Hebrew word translated âcomfortâ also means âto repent.â God brings comfort, not to rebellious people but to repentant people.
The arrangement of chapters 40â66 is not accidental. âThe Book of Consolationâ is divided into three sections; each focuses on a different Person of the Godhead and a different attribute of God. Chapters 40â48 exalt the greatness of God the Father; chapters 49â57, the grace of God the Son, Godâs Suffering Servant; and chapters 58â66, the glory of the future kingdom when the Spirit is poured out on Godâs people. ...