The book of the prophet Isaiah.
Isaiah lived in Jerusalem in the latter half of Israel's Kingdom period and he spoke on
God's behalf to the leaders of Jerusalem and Judah. He spoke first of all a
message of God's judgment; he warned Israel's corrupt leaders that their
rebellion against their covenant with God would come at a cost, that God was
going to use the great empires of Assyria and after them Babylon to judge
Jerusalem if they persisted in idolatry and oppression of the poor, but that
announcement was combined with a message of hope. Isaiah believed deeply
that God would one day fulfill all of his covenant promises: that he would send
a king from David's line to establish God's kingdom (remember 2nd Samuel 7),
that he would lead Israel in obedience to all of the laws of the Covenant made
at Mount Sinai (remember Exodus chapter 19), and all of this was so that God's
blessing and salvation would flow outward to all of the nations like God
promised to Abraham in Genesis chapter 12, and it's this hope that compelled
Isaiah to speak out against the corruption and idolatry of Israel in his day.
Now the book has a pretty complex literary design, but there's one simple way to see
how it all fits together: chapters 1 through 39 contain three large sections that
develop Isaiah's warning of judgment on Israel, and it all culminates in an event
pointed to at the end of chapter 39 - the fall of Jerusalem and the exile of the
people to Babylon - but in chapters 1 to 39 there's also a message of hope that
after the exile God's covenant promises would all be fulfilled, and chapters 40
to 66 pick up that promise of hope and develops it further. In this video we're
just gonna focus on chapters 1 to 39. The first main section focuses on Isaiah's
vision of judgment and hope for Jerusalem, and it begins as Isaiah accuses the
city's leaders of Covenant rebellion, idolatry, injustice, and God says he's
going to judge the city by sending the nations to conquer Israel. Isaiah says
that this will be like a purifying fire that burns away all that's worthless in
Israel in order to create a new Jerusalem that's populated by a remnant
that has repented and turned back to God and Isaiah says that that's when God's
kingdom will come and all nations will come to the temple in
Jerusalem and learn of God's justice, bringing about a
age of universal peace and harmony. Now it's this basic storyline of the old
Jerusalem, purifying judgment into the New Jerusalem, this is going to get
repeated over and over throughout the book getting filled in with increasing
detail. So, at the center of this section is Isaiah's grand vision of God sitting
on his throne in the temple and he's surrounded by these heavenly creatures
that are shouting that God is holy holy holy, and Isaiah suddenly realizes just
how corrupt he and his people Israel are, and he's certain that he's going to be
destroyed by God's holiness, but he's not. God holiness in the form of this burning
coal comes and burns him, but not to destroy, rather it purifies him from his sin. And
as Isaiah ponders this strange experience God commissions him with a very
difficult task: he is to keep announcing this coming judgment, but because Israel
has reached a point of no return his warnings are going to have a paradoxical
effect of hardening the people. But Isaiah is to trust God's plan. Israel is going
to be chopped down like a tree and left like a stump in a field, and that
stump will itself be scorched and burned but after all of that burning God says
that this smoldering stump is a holy seed that will survive into the future.
It's a small sign of hope but who or what is that Holy Seed? The rest of this
section offers an answer. Isaiah confronts Ahaz, a descendant of David
and a King of Jerusalem, and he announces his downfall. God says that it's the
great empire of Assyria who will first chop Israel down and devastate the land,
but there's hope. Because of God's promise to David he's going to send after
this destruction a new king named Emmanuel, which means "God with us", and
Emanuel's Kingdom is going to set God's people free from violent oppressive
empires, and Isaiah describes this coming king as a small shoot of new growth that
will emerge from the old stump of David's family. It's this king that's the holy
seed from chapter six, and the king is going to be empowered by God's Spirit to rule over a new Jerusalem and bring
justice for the poor and all nations will look to this messianic king for
guidance. His kingdom will transform all creation
bringing peace. Now you finish chapters 1 through 12 with pretty good
understanding of Isaiah's message of judgment and hope, but when will this all
happen? Isaiah saw another Empire arising after Assyria, and thats Babylon, who
would also attack Jerusalem and actually succeed in destroying it, and
that brings us in the next sections of the book. So first we have a large
collection of poems that explore God's judgment and hope for the nations.
We learn first of all of the fall of Babylon and Israel's neighbors. Isaiah
could see that a serious world power would one day be replaced by the empire
of Babylon, a nation even more destructive an arrogant. Babylon's kings
claimed that they were higher than all other gods and so God vows to bring
Babylon down. And not only Babylon, Isaiah goes on to list Israel's neighbors
accusing them all of the same kind of pride and injustice, and he predicts
their ultimate ruin. But remember for Isaiah God's judgment is never the final
word for Israel or the nations, and that leads into the next section with a
series of poems that tell a tale of two cities. There's the lofty city that has
exalted itself above God and become corrupt and unjust. This city is an
archetype of rebellious humanity and is described with language that's all
borrowed from Isaiah's earlier descriptions of Jerusalem and Assyria
and Babylon all put together. This city is destined for ruin and one day is
going to be replaced by the New Jerusalem where God reigns as king over a
redeemed humanity from all nations and there's no more death or suffering. These
chapters are the climax to this section and it shows how Isaiah's message pointed
far beyond his own day, it was a message for all who are waiting for God to bring
his justice on violent oppressive kingdoms and bring his kingdom of
justice and peace and healing love. The following section return the focus to
the rise and fall of Jerusalem, and first we find a whole bunch of poems where Isaiah
accuses Jerusalem's leaders for turning to Egypt for military protection against Assyria. He knows this
will backfire and Isaiah says that only trust in their God and repentance can
save Israel now, which gets illustrated by the following story about the rise of
Hezekiah, king of Jerusalem. Just as Isaiah predicted, the Assyrian armies come and
try to attack the city and so Hezekiah humbles himself before God and he
prays for divine deliverance and the city is miraculously saved overnight, but
Hezekiah's rise is immediately followed by his fall. So he hosts a
delegation from Babylon and he tries to impress them by showing everything in
Jerusalem's treasury and temple and palaces, it's clearly an effort to make
another political alliance for protection. Isaiah hears about this and he
confronts Hezekiah for his foolishness. He predicts that this ally will one day
betray him and return as an enemy to conquer Jerusalem, and we know from
2nd Kings chapters 24 and 25 that Isaiah was right. Over a hundred years later
Babylon would turn on Jerusalem, come and destroy the city, its temple, and carry
the Israelites away to exile in Babylon. And so all of Isaiah's warnings of
divine judgment in chapters 1 to 39 lead up to this moment. He's shown to be a
true prophet because it all came to pass like he said. But remember the purpose of
God's judgment was to purify Jerusalem and bring the holy seed and messianic
Kingdom over all nations, and it's that hope that gets explored in the next part
of the book, but for now that's what Isaiah chapters 1 to 39 are all about.