SQLSTATE[23000]: Integrity constraint violation: 1062 Duplicate entry '216.73.216.56-2025-10-20 13:37:24-2025-10-20 13:37:24' for key 'PRIMARY'

The Book

THE BOOK


Book picture



MESSAGE TO ISRAEL.

‘The historical allusions in the scattered chapters of Isaiah’s work agree with the title verse, according to which he was a contemporary of the Judean kings Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah. His prophetic call is precisely dated by him “in the year that King Uzziah died”. At least a part of chapter 7 refers to the event of the year 734 when Ephraim and Syria jointly threatened King Ahaz of Judah. In 732 Tiglath-pileser conquered Damascus, the fall of which Isaiah had anticipated. In 722 Samaria, the capital of Ephraim fell to King Sargon of Assyria, which event Isaiah had also foreseen. By the end of the century (701) Sennacherib had laid siege to Jerusalem – and had subsequently withdrawn. Chapters 1:4-8; 10:27-34; 28:14-22; 30:1-7; and 31:1-4 point to those difficult days when Jerusalem was beleaguered and King Hezekiah feverishly sought help from Egypt. Isaiah brought sparse comfort to his kings – even when the siege was lifted, as noted in the passage cited from chapter 22.’

Let’s break into Blank’s essay to briefly quote one of the above Scriptures he names. Whilst they are all of interest, we need the more hard-hitting ones for our purpose. To that end we will quote his reference verse in Chapter 28.

“Therefore, hear scornful jesters, the Word of the LORD,
You who rule in Jerusalem over this Race,
Who say, ‘We recorded a Treaty with Death,
With the Pit made provision for out-bursting flood.
If it sweeps out, it comes not to us, but dries up, ----
We are safe, and in cunning can hide!’

“Therefore says the Master of Life, ---- “Look on Me; ---
I will fix a stone up in Zion,
A chosen stone perfectly set,
Immovably fixed in the Truth, ----
Fixed truly by line, and exactly by plummet; ----
But hail shall throw down all the refuge of lies,

And floods wash your den, and abolish your treaty with Death,
And your League with the Pit will not stand in the rush,
When it passes and you are trod down!
It will seize, as it passes, on you,
As the Dusk and Dusk passes to Morn or to Night,
And will come on with terror to sight and to hearing.”

(Isaiah, 28:14-19. Fenton Bible.)

The line: “Fixed truly by line, and exactly by plummet; ----“, is indicative of one of Isaiah’s greater Proclamations that he would: “Make straight the Way of The LORD!”

Now let’s let Sheldon Blank educate us more about this truly remarkable man.

‘It would be wrong to suppose that Isaiah came to Israel simply to announce the approaching disaster. Painfully sensitive to the rottenness of his society, Isaiah foresaw its consequent collapse. But he also knew and offered an alternative to tragedy; his people’s survival depended on their acceptance again of the ancient moral demands. By returning they might be saved. To obtain their return was his program. Or, differently and more properly stated, because he spoke for God and of God, his goal was to redirect his people into the ways acceptable to the God whom by their conduct they had alienated, and so to save them from catastrophe he screamed dread warnings and pleaded for amendment. He gave way to despair only because his program had no success. His people seemed to him bent on self-destruction; that was the sickening course of their destiny as he saw it unfolding.

His impossible program comes through in the crisis of 701 during which he stands in violent opposition to the generals ready to go to Egypt for help against the Assyrians laying siege to Zion. Isaiah looked neither to allies nor to armaments for security. If it is God who decides the destiny of nations, security is for God to grant and for men to deserve. Isaiah held the daring view that the best defense is no defense – none other than the reconciling response to the moral demand. No men are secure when some are denied security. “This”, he said, “is rest” [i.e., security]; give rest to the weary.”

A case can be made for a theory that Isaiah drew back at the brink, incapable of conceiving a world wholly emptied of his people. What supports this view is a paradox; the observation that, irrationally, he entrusted his rejected message to his Disciples and preserved it in a book for the instruction of the survivors of a people doomed to leave no survivors.

There is no consensus as concerns the precise limits of the words of the 8th century Isaiah or the degree of consistency with which he sustained his tragic monotone. Certainly in his book as it has come down, his nature is elusive – both stern and tender. Magnificently hopeful passages constantly mingle with the prevailing atmosphere of doom. Probably his son’s name, Shear-yashuv, means something like “a mere fragment will survive,” but possibly it has a hopeful ring; no total disaster – some shall survive. Possibly the name Immanuel (God is with Us), prophesied for the child who shall be a sign from God that Judah will not be overcome by Israel and Syria, expresses the confidence that God will never forsake his people. (*) And possibly other such assurances are in fact words of Isaiah himself, compelled by his love to palliate the blow.

But there is an alternative solution. Although Isaiah was far from popular in his day, he does appear to have attracted some followers: “Seal the teaching among my Disciples.” These may have been the circle that kept alive his name and his words – in writing or learned “by heart” – the nucleus of what was to become, through a developing tradition, the biblical book of Isaiah. And quite possibly successive generations of such Isaiah-men, piously keeping his words alive through radically changing times, added the sustaining messages of hope, well designed to seize the fancy of suffering humanity down ten centuries.’
(Britannica.)

(*) Blanks above two paragraphs allude to two separate and seemingly unrelated segments of his prophecies. Apparently pertaining to Isaiah’s time and political situation, as they probably did; nonetheless, there is a further element of prophetic expectation on a broader and farther-reaching time-scale from the same group of ‘Isaiah-prophecies’.

The error of Blank’s assumption regarding the birth of the child, Immanuel (God is with Us) is that he presumes that it must be Jesus -- as virtually all other ‘Bible scholars’ have done since the birth of the Christian religion two millennia ago --- who will save the Jewish race of the day.

Yet, Isaiah did not prophesy the birth of Jesus. He never even proclaimed that Name. The Church has consistently “pushed” a terrible distortion for all of its religious life. Notwithstanding the fact that Discourse 2 dealt with the “Sonship of God” sufficiently enough from the overall monotheistic viewpoint, we will completely clarify monotheism’s monumental error over the next three Discourses.

Blanks wonderful ‘turn of phrase’ of: --- “Isaiah-men, piously keeping his words alive through radically changing times, added the sustaining message of hope, well designed to seize the fancy of suffering humanity down ten centuries...” possesses the fascinating paradox of it being prophetic in its own right.

In other words, Blank --- perhaps inadvertently or unknowingly --- has nonetheless tapped into the heart of what Isaiah saw and understood as our present-day inexorable and inevitable societal collapse and destruction. His ‘gifted’ visionary-prowess permitted him to see the end of an allotted time-span for human beings, by which time we were meant to have finally “gotten it right” --- in preparation for a new dawn on earth. But first the cleansing i.e., “few men left...”

Isaiah’s prophetic legacy has seemingly struck a kind of empathetic chord with present-day Western humanity. Curiously, that is probably because of an unspoken but nonetheless very real and unnerving fear that we, as an earthly collective, simply cannot continue our present destructive path for much longer. In that regard, The Book of Isaiah, perversely, yet strangely comfortingly, seems to offer reason and logic for those very fears.

The Koran has many Verses pertaining to the same ‘End-time’ scenario, but not an Isaiah who similarly proclaims. Islamic prophecy along these lines tends toward a different kind of Proclaimer. For the moment, we will let Isaiah have his Discourse, and perhaps more closely assess our ‘End-time’ from Muslim and Christian thought further on.





THE BOOK