ISAIAH, PROPHET OF
SALVATION, PART 1
By
Dr. Stephen Jones: 3-3-2020
Blog Post Date: 3-5-2020
This
morning our Father said to start a series on the prophet Isaiah. This seems to
coincide with my latest FFI bulletin that was just sent out a few days ago. I
look forward to this study, because at one time I considered it to be my
favorite book of the Bible. In the mid-1970’s, Romans replaced Isaiah as
my favorite. Eventually, Deuteronomy became my favorite.
Today,
it is hard to tell, because they all are integrated and fit together as a
whole. It seems like every time I do a particular commentary, that becomes my
favorite book—at least for the moment. I am always impressed by whatever book I
study. I hope it shows, and I hope to pass on my enthusiasm and love for the
word.
As
I said, I have loved the book of Isaiah for decades. However, I have never done
a forensic study of the book from beginning to end. As most of you know by now,
having read a number of these studies, we get a whole new understanding and
appreciation for a book of the Bible when we start at the beginning and go
through it verse by verse to see the flow of the revelation. By doing this, we
get the author’s intent, much like a story, rather than just picking out a few
memorable quotes to apply to our own lives.
In
other words, by the time we finish the book, we can see the big picture and
have a better understanding of the Kingdom itself. The more we do this, the
more our worldview changes, because our Christian belief system no longer
focuses upon ourselves but upon Christ and His Kingdom. In that context, we are
able to find our own individual calling, function, and place in that Kingdom.
Two
Revolutions
There
has always been a philosophical tension between the individual and the
collective. America’s constitution (1789) focused on preserving individual
rights, and the people at that time were endued with the spirit of “rugged
individualism,” as the historians call it. This formed the background of the
American Revolution itself.
However,
there was another revolution in 1789 that was based on very different
principles, for the French Revolution sowed the seeds of modern Socialism and
its goal, Communism, which emphasized the collective over the individual. The
rights of the State were elevated over the rights of individuals in that
system, and 50 years after the French Revolution, Karl Marx was hired to write The
Communist Manifesto as a banner uniting all the Socialists.
These
two revolutions (America and France) have defined political and social
conflicts up to the present time. The American Revolution was designed to
protect individual rights against the collective will of the majority, and they
found these principles in Scripture. The French Revolution set forth Masonic ideals,
designed to destroy the existing order, to wipe to clean, and start over with a
new calendar with the Year Zero.
To
do this required a totalitarian form of government to overrule the will of the
people, supposedly acting in the name of the people. And it was willing to kill
all opposition to achieve its goals, not allowing any to disagree with its
political narrative. Promising them liberty, they brought them into bondage (2
Peter 2:19).
Historically
speaking, then, 1789 was extremely important, and so it is little wonder that
the book of Revelation would treat it as a great turning point in Revelation
13. It is the end of the 3½ “times” (i.e., 360 x 3.5, or 1260 years) from the rise
of the “little horn” of Daniel 7:25. The starting point was in 529
A.D., when Emperor Justinian changed the laws of the Roman empire with his Corpus
Juris Civilis. This law became the foundation of western law. At the same
time, he changed the calendar to one we still use, based on the birth of Jesus
Christ, rather than on the founding of Rome in 753 B.C.
Hence,
Justinian’s actions reshaped the history of the Western nations, and 1260 years
later, in 1789, two revolutions again reshaped the world. Revelation 13 treats
it in terms of two beasts, the first (religious beast) from the sea, and the
second (financial beast) from the earth. Today we are witnessing the collapse
of both of these beasts, as God prepares the way for His Kingdom to emerge and
dominate for the next thousand years.
This
is the big picture, which few understand, because they still think that the
book of Revelation is fulfilled in a seven-year period with apocalyptic
disasters that will destroy the earth while the church escapes in a rapture.
Yet the book of Revelation is prophetic of history, written in symbolic
language. It gives us a broad sketch of timing as well, which shows us that all
of these historical events were planned by God from the beginning.
Isaiah’s
Big Picture
Isaiah
does not focus on timing, as we see with Daniel and John. This prophet
focuses upon the process of destroying the old kingdom (Israel) and the
reconstruction of the Kingdom under better and more enduring principles—that
is, under the New Covenant. Whereas the first kingdom was doomed to failure
from the beginning, having been founded under the Old Covenant, the final
Kingdom is doomed to succeed.
The
Old Covenant was based on the will of man; the New Covenant is based on the
will of God (John 1:13). Man always fails; God always
succeeds in the end, although it usually appears like He is failing all the way
to His ultimate success. He does this to distinguish between those who have
faith and those who have an opinion.
Isaiah’s
prophecies are divided into two large sections: Isaiah 1-39 and Isaiah 40-66.
The first section focuses on the decline and fall of the kingdom of Israel
through the failure of men. The second section focuses on the restoration and
reconstruction of the Kingdom through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Theologians
often refer to these two sections as First and Second Isaiah. Many treat these
as if they were written by two different authors. However, the structure of the
book shows that they were meant to be two halves of a single book. As with so
many other books of the Bible, Isaiah is written in a Hebrew parallelism, as
Dr. Bullinger shows us in his introductory notes.
A
Exhortations (1:2 – 5:30)
B
The Voice from the Temple (6:1-13)
C
Historic Events and Prophecies (Ahaz) (7:1 – 12:6)
D
Burdens of the Nations (13:1 – 27:13)
D1
Woes of the Nations (28:1 – 35:10)
C1
Historic Events and Prophecies (Hezekiah) (36:1 – 39:8)
B1
The Voice from the Wilderness (40:1-11)
A1
Exhortations (40:12 – 66:24)
As
anyone can see, the parallelism would be incomplete without the final B1
and A1.
Isaiah’s
World
Isaiah
lived in a time that saw the destruction of Samaria and the kingdom of Israel
and the deportation of the Israelites into Assyria. He was in Jerusalem when
the Assyrians came again to try to conquer Judah. The Assyrian army was
destroyed by the angel of God (Isaiah
37:36), thus sparing the kingdom of Judah for another century until God
raised up Babylon to conquer Jerusalem and deport the people to Babylonia for a
70-year captivity.
Most
Christians focus so much on the story of Judah that they forget the story of
Israel. Somehow Judah and Israel become one in their minds, and this is the
source of much prophetic confusion that exists in the church today. When the
prophets speak of Israel, many Christians think in terms of the Jews (i.e.,
“Judah”), and so their minds associate these prophecies with the modern Jewish
state which they named Israel in order to perpetuate that confusion.
The
prophets, however, make no such identification after Israel and Judah split
into two nations. Prior to that split, during the United Kingdom of Israel, the
term Israel referred to all the tribes. However, during the Divided Kingdom,
the term Israel was used by the prophets to distinguish it from Judah,
except when they were contemplating the repair of the breach and the
reunification of the two nations.
Knowing
the difference between Israel and Judah is one of the foremost keys to
understanding Bible prophecy. Most Christians, however, do not understand this
difference, and so they remain in a state of confusion and are misguided by
many prophecy teachers today who assume that the Jews are the Israelites and
that the state of Israel is the reconstruction of ancient Israel. Yet the
"lost tribes of Israel" remain lost, at least to those who have not
studied history. They remain lost because they are not Jews and because they
lost their name Israel.
Isaiah
himself knew the difference, as we will see from his prophecies. He lived in
the time of the Divided Kingdom, when all of the people knew the difference
between a Jew and an Israelite. But if we do not know what Isaiah knew, we will
never truly understand Isaiah, because we will be using different definitions
of his terminology.
Isaiah
prophesied in the years of Uzziah, Jothan, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, who were kings
of Judah. Uzziah of Judah was the contemporary of King Jeroboam II of Israel,
during whose reign the great earthquake occurred (Amos
1:1). This earthquake greatly weakened Israel and caused a 24-year
disruption of the monarchy in Israel.
Finally,
some of the more powerful warlords in Israel took the throne, ruling for short
periods of time. Jotham, son of Uzziah of Judah, began to reign during the time
when Pekah ruled Israel. Jotham’s son, Ahaz, ruled during the final years of
Pekah in Israel and into the time of Hoshea, the last king of Israel.
Hezekiah,
son of Ahaz, came to the throne of Judah in the third year of Hoshea, king of
Israel (2 Kings 18:1). Hezekiah had ruled just four
years in Jerusalem when the Assyrians laid siege to Samaria and conquered it
three years later (2 Kings 18:10). Isaiah was still prophesying
during this time, although it appears that he was living in Judah. Hence, he
was not directly affected by the downfall of Israel. Isaiah was said to have
been martyred by Hezekiah’s son, Manasseh.
This
turbulent time in Israel’s history was when Isaiah prophesied, bearing witness
to the word of the Lord. Because Hezekiah was a good king, the life of the
kingdom of Judah was extended, even as Hezekiah’s own life was extended 15
years (Isaiah
38:5).
The
Two Mandates Reunited
Though
Isaiah was from Judah, most of his prophecies concerned the northern House of
Israel, which carried the birthright of Joseph (1
Chronicles 5:1, 2). When Israel was destroyed and the people
deported to Assyria, the birthright appeared to be lost as well. Isaiah,
however, gave hope, prophesying the restoration of the birthright and its
Fruitfulness Mandate and its authority (and right) to bring forth the sons of
God.
The
division of the kingdom split Judah’s Dominion Mandate from Joseph’s
Fruitfulness Mandate, ensuring that the sons of God would not be manifested in
the earth for a very long time—except, of course, for individual overcomers in
a limited way. The manner in which the two Mandates are reunited begins to be
clarified in the New Testament, at least for those who have eyes to see and who
know what they are seeing.
Isaiah’s
prophecy gives many such foundational truths, which the New Testament
writers—the Apostle Paul especially—draw upon in constructing Christian
teaching. These things we will study as we proceed.
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