Sancho
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First of all, after keeping my distance from the tangling strands of the internet, I'm glad to have found this site to be able to take part in these cross religion discussions, which is increasingly important.
For the past couple years I've been very interested in the prophet believed to have been born in Babylonia during Israel's time of exile whose writings have been included in the book of Isaiah. Bernhard Duhm published a book in 1892 which led to the acceptance by most 20th Century bible scholars that the book of Isaiah contains the words of two brilliant prophets whose lives were separated by over a century and a community of prophets who followed in their ways.
To keep this post brief let me suggest that anyone interested in the exegesis of the matter consult one of the many commentaries on the book of Isaiah, while I get on with the four points I wish to make at the moment.
1 The fifteen chapters of the book of Isaiah attributed to Second Isaiah (40-55) are, in my opinion, some of the most poetically beautiful verses to be found in any of the world's scriptures, and the power of the theology found in those verses is reinforced by the artistic coherence.
2 Monotheism arrived at a pinnacle of expression in these verses. Much of what is expressed in these fifteen chapters goes to the core of many religions, though placed in the context of Israel's past, present, and future.
3 These verses, as John W Miller argues in his 1986 book, 'The origins of the bible: rethinking canon history', were very influential on those who brought the bible together under Ezra, particularly on seeing Israel's history as the history of the world with Israel charged with the role of being "a light onto the nations." Ezra was working with his 'men of the great assembly' not long after Cyrus and his Persian Empire liberated the Jews from Babylonia, as Second Isaiah said he would --with YHWH's blessing. The Trito-Isaiah community were actively expressing the teachings of this great prophet during the time when Ezra was at work, perhaps contributing to a guiding perspective in how the texts were compiled and redacted into the testament we have today.
4 It is my belief that Jesus modeled himself according to the suffering servant image which recurs throughout Isaiah 40-55. I doubt that Jesus identified with either the son of man image or the messiah image. I believe Jesus saw all individuals as the sons and daughters and servants of God.
I'm interested in getting people talking about various connecting points between various religions. Is anyone interested in reinterpreting theology according to the light shed by Second Isaiah?
For the past couple years I've been very interested in the prophet believed to have been born in Babylonia during Israel's time of exile whose writings have been included in the book of Isaiah. Bernhard Duhm published a book in 1892 which led to the acceptance by most 20th Century bible scholars that the book of Isaiah contains the words of two brilliant prophets whose lives were separated by over a century and a community of prophets who followed in their ways.
To keep this post brief let me suggest that anyone interested in the exegesis of the matter consult one of the many commentaries on the book of Isaiah, while I get on with the four points I wish to make at the moment.
1 The fifteen chapters of the book of Isaiah attributed to Second Isaiah (40-55) are, in my opinion, some of the most poetically beautiful verses to be found in any of the world's scriptures, and the power of the theology found in those verses is reinforced by the artistic coherence.
2 Monotheism arrived at a pinnacle of expression in these verses. Much of what is expressed in these fifteen chapters goes to the core of many religions, though placed in the context of Israel's past, present, and future.
3 These verses, as John W Miller argues in his 1986 book, 'The origins of the bible: rethinking canon history', were very influential on those who brought the bible together under Ezra, particularly on seeing Israel's history as the history of the world with Israel charged with the role of being "a light onto the nations." Ezra was working with his 'men of the great assembly' not long after Cyrus and his Persian Empire liberated the Jews from Babylonia, as Second Isaiah said he would --with YHWH's blessing. The Trito-Isaiah community were actively expressing the teachings of this great prophet during the time when Ezra was at work, perhaps contributing to a guiding perspective in how the texts were compiled and redacted into the testament we have today.
4 It is my belief that Jesus modeled himself according to the suffering servant image which recurs throughout Isaiah 40-55. I doubt that Jesus identified with either the son of man image or the messiah image. I believe Jesus saw all individuals as the sons and daughters and servants of God.
I'm interested in getting people talking about various connecting points between various religions. Is anyone interested in reinterpreting theology according to the light shed by Second Isaiah?