Scholars generally divide Isaiah into three distinct sections based on the changes in the timeline, assuming that there were at least three authors. Others argue that Isaiah likely wrote an even smaller section of the book, possibly as few as seven chapters 6— The rest of the book is the work of numerous disciples who lived over the next years or so. You have hundreds. And the timeline is no longer divided into three neat sections. Portions of 1—39 were written during the exile. Portions of 40—55 really were written before the exile.
Still others, like Dr. John Oswalt , argue that Isaiah was the original source for all 66 chapters, but that the book was assembled over the years from his collected works: his speeches, sermons, talks, and comments.
I'm not at all sure that Isaiah himself wrote the book as we have it. However, I do believe that all that is in the book originated with Isaiah and probably that his disciples then were the ones who collected what he said and commented on and put it in its present form.
Israel will fill the earth. Isaiah 28—35 Isaiah foretells the apostasy, the Restoration, and the coming forth of the Book of Mormon. Israel will be scattered because they rejected the Lord and the prophets. People will turn away from the Lord and become wicked before the Second Coming.
Zion will be supported by its stakes. The Lord will punish the wicked at the Second Coming. Isaiah 36—39 Isaiah describes the invasion of Assyria. King Hezekiah asks Isaiah for advice to prevent the destruction of Jerusalem. Isaiah was best known as the Hebrew prophet who predicted the coming of Jesus Christ to salvage mankind from sin. Isaiah lived about years before the birth of Jesus Christ.
Olivia Rodrigo —. Megan Thee Stallion —. One could imagine why these prophecies would be kept, and verified at a later date. How would they check up on this prophecy to see if it indeed comes to pass? Even if some parts of the book are true representations of the words of Isaiah, certainly major parts of the book are not.
This had already been suggested by 12th century Rabbi Abraham Ibn Ezra, who pointed out that the prophesies in chapters 40 to 66, and in chapters 34 and 35, were written in a language very different from the rest of the book, and make no mention of Isaiah in them. Most modern scholars agree that these chapters cannot be describing prophesies by the original Isaiah, whether written by Hezekiah or not. They had to have been written by someone living after the destruction of Jerusalem in BCE.
These chapters had to have been written by some other prophet living in the context of the Babylonian Exile. Since we do not know his name, scholars refer to him or, less likely, her as Second Isaiah or Deutero-Isaiah. The prophesies in the last 10 chapters of the book seem to have been written by yet a third prophet, who lived after the Babylonian Exile, during the early Second Temple period probably the fifth century BCE. Scholars call this prophet Third Isaiah or Trito-Isaiah, though some think the language of Second and Third Isaiah are so similar that they may have been the same person writing before and after the return to Jerusalem.
And then there are chapters 36 to 39, which are not prophecies at all, but prose accounts of the life of Isaiah.
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