Isaiah's Suffering Servant Flashcards
When did Isaiah live
8th century BCE
Describe his background
Probably from the royal family of Judah (the House of David) and he lived through difficult times. The Assyrians destroyed the northern Kingdom of Israel and dispersed its pop. When Judah allied itself with the Egyptians, they were the next to be threatened: Jerusalem was attacked twice by the Assyrians but miraculously survived. The Jews believed that angels had protected the city from the fate that befell their neighbour
How does his career as a prophet begin
Begins in 742 BCE, with a shattering RE in the temple. He had a vision of God on his throne, praised by angels while smoke and noise fills the temple. This is a numinous RE for Isaiah - he is gripped by a sense of his own sinfulness and unworthiness. An angel brings a fiery coal to his lips to burn away his sin. He hears God saying to his angels ‘Whom shall I send?’ and the newly purified Isaiah calls out ‘Here I am! Send Me!’
What unpleasant message must he deliver to the people of Judah
That God has condemned them for their sinful ways, particularly for their greed and their mistreatment of the poor. The Assyrians rising against them is an instrument of God’s anger: God is using them to punish them for their sins. He predicts military defeat, slavery and humiliation for the people of Judah, predicting the same fate endured by northern Israel
Isaiah turns out to be right as this happens around 100 years after his death, although it is the Babylonians rather than the Assyrians
How did he criticise the temple priesthood
He said that God was sick of their sacrifices of animals and wants them to lead moral lives instead
Why is Isaiah important for the debate around who the messiah is
He predicts the future messianic age where wars between empires will end and the jews will be able to live in peace on their land, worshipping God properly and leading moral lives
He goes beyond predicting happiness solely for the Jews: describing a future world where no one will have to suffer, a sort of paradise on earth
Because of this his prophecies have always been important for those trying to identify the messiah. Isaiah seems to hold the answers but his prophecies are like riddles and can be interpreted in many ways
Explain the idea of the suffering servant
Unusual figure that keeps appearing in Isaiah’s prophecies. Serves God with total selflessness and loyalty. He is given mission by God to lead the nations of the world. However, the servant is mocked, abused and attacked by the people God has sent him to help. He endures his sufferings without complaining, intervening on behalf of other people and bearing sufferings for them. Finally he is murdered. However, God returns the servant to life and rewards the servant infront of the whole world. The people who had mistreated him are stunned and ashamed
What did 19th century German scholar Bernard Duhm say about the suffering servant
He noticed that the references to the SS are grouped together in 4 olaces and these passages are separate poems or songs. They are known as the 4 servant songs
Where can the first servant song be found
Isaiah 42: 1-4
What does this first servant song say
God chooses the servant who will bring justice to to earth. The servant is a kingly messiah and a prophetic messiah who brings about God’s will on earth
State Isaiah 42:1
Here is my servant, whom I uphold, my chosen one in whom I delight. I will put my spirit on him, and he will bring justice to the nation
How does this relate to the description of Jesus baptism as described in the synoptics
God is pleased with and delights in Jesus and outs his spirit into him. This links Jesus to the servant in Isaiah 42
Where does the second servant song take place
49: 1-6
What happens in this servant song
This song is from the servants POV. He describes how he was called by God to lead not just the Jews but all the nations. The servant will not be a political or military ruler but a ‘light to the Gentiles’ - a source of inspiration and a moral teacher
Isaiah 49:6
I will also make you a light for the gentiles, that my salvation may reach the ends of the earth