10.21.2013

How Many "Isaiahs"?




The issue of prophecy is one thing that has caused many scholars to question the written word of Isaiah.  These critics insist that  the latter portion of the book must have been written by someone who lived in the sixth century B.C.E., either during or after the Babylonian exile.  (Because that Satan putting doubts in his mind, that's what he does)  According to them, the prophecies of Judah's desolation were written  after their fulfillment and hence were not really predictions at all.   These critics (anyone who believes in critics are ignorant, it is an excuse for job that is not needed)  also note that  after chapter 40, the book of Isaiah speaks as if Babylon were the prevailing power and the Israelites were in captivity there.  So they reason that whoever wrote the latter portion of Isaiah must have done so during that era-during the sixth century B.C.E. (again Satan) Is there a solid basis for such reasoning? Absolutely not!

It was not until the 12th century C.E. that the written word of Isaiah was called into question.  This was by Jewish commentator Abraham Ibn Ezra. "In his commentary on Isaiah," says the Encyclopedia Judaica, "[Abraham Ibn Ezra] states that the second half, from chapter 40, was the work of a prophet who lived during the Babylonian Exile and the early period of the Return to Zion."  During the  18th and 19th centuries, Ibn Ezra's views were adopted  by a number of scholars, including Johann Christoph Doederlein, a German theologian, who published his exegetical work on Isaiah in 1775, with a second edition in 1789.  The New Century Bible Commentary notes:  "All but the most conservative scholars now accept the hypothesis put forward by Doederlein . . . that the prophecies contained in chapters 40-66 of the book of Isaiah are not the words of the eighth-century prophet Isaiah but come from a later time. 

However question about the written word or authenticity of  the book of Isaiah did not stop there.  (Satan does not know when to quit) The theory regarding a second Isaiah-or a Deutero-Isaiah-gave birth to the notion that a third writer may have been involved. (Oh  give me a break!  what a dum-dum; these are God's Words written down by Jesus' prophets/disciples) Then the book of Isaiah was dissected further, so that one scholar ascribes chapters 15 and 16 to an unknown prophet, while another questions the authenticity of chapters 23 to 27.  Still another says that  Isaiah could not have penned the words found in chapters 34 and 35.  Why? Because the material closely resembles  that found in chapters 40 to 66, which has already been credited to someone other than the eighth century Isaiah! (Satan, again) Bible commentator Charles C. Torrey succinctly summarizes the result of this reasoning process.  "The once great "Prophet of the Exile,' " he says, "has dwindled to a very small figure, and is all but buried in a mass of jumbled fragments."  However, not all scholars agree with such dissecting of the book of Isaiah.

Next time: Evidence of the Writer

From the Book Isaiah's Prophecy Light for all Mankind, Volume II, 2001

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for your commment. Your comment will be reviewed for approval soon.

God Bless.