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Isaiah

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\Isaiah\

(Heb. Yesh'yahu, i.e., "the salvation of Jehovah"). (1.) The son

of Amoz (Isa. 1:1; 2:1), who was apparently a man of humble

rank. His wife was called "the prophetess" (8:3), either because

she was endowed with the prophetic gift, like Deborah (Judg.

4:4) and Huldah (2 Kings 22:14-20), or simply because she was

the wife of "the prophet" (Isa. 38:1). He had two sons, who bore

symbolical names.


He exercised the functions of his office during the reigns of

Uzziah (or Azariah), Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah (1:1). Uzziah

reigned fifty-two years (B.C. 810-759), and Isaiah must have

begun his career a few years before Uzziah's death, probably

B.C. 762. He lived till the fourteenth year of Hezekiah, and in

all likelihood outlived that monarch (who died B.C. 698), and

may have been contemporary for some years with Manasseh. Thus

Isaiah may have prophesied for the long period of at least

sixty-four years.


His first call to the prophetical office is not recorded. A

second call came to him "in the year that King Uzziah died"

(Isa. 6:1). He exercised his ministry in a spirit of

uncompromising firmness and boldness in regard to all that bore

on the interests of religion. He conceals nothing and keeps

nothing back from fear of man. He was also noted for his

spirituality and for his deep-toned reverence toward "the holy

One of Israel."


In early youth Isaiah must have been moved by the invasion of

Israel by the Assyrian monarch Pul (q.v.), 2 Kings 15:19; and

again, twenty years later, when he had already entered on his

office, by the invasion of Tiglath-pileser and his career of

conquest. Ahaz, king of Judah, at this crisis refused to

co-operate with the kings of Israel and Syria in opposition to

the Assyrians, and was on that account attacked and defeated by

Rezin of Damascus and Pekah of Samaria (2 Kings 16:5; 2 Chr.

28:5, 6). Ahaz, thus humbled, sided with Assyria, and sought the

aid of Tiglath-pileser against Israel and Syria. The consequence

was that Rezin and Pekah were conquered and many of the people

carried captive to Assyria (2 Kings 15:29; 16:9; 1 Chr. 5:26).

Soon after this Shalmaneser determined wholly to subdue the

kingdom of Israel. Samaria was taken and destroyed (B.C. 722).

So long as Ahaz reigned, the kingdom of Judah was unmolested by

the Assyrian power; but on his accession to the throne, Hezekiah

(B.C. 726), who "rebelled against the king of Assyria" (2 Kings

18:7), in which he was encouraged by Isaiah, who exhorted the

people to place all their dependence on Jehovah (Isa. 10:24;

37:6), entered into an alliance with the king of Egypt (Isa.

30:2-4). This led the king of Assyria to threaten the king of

Judah, and at length to invade the land. Sennacherib (B.C. 701)

led a powerful army into Palestine. Hezekiah was reduced to

despair, and submitted to the Assyrians (2 Kings 18:14-16). But

after a brief interval war broke out again, and again

Sennacherib (q.v.) led an army into Palestine, one detachment of

which threatened Jerusalem (Isa. 36:2-22; 37:8). Isaiah on that

occasion encouraged Hezekiah to resist the Assyrians (37:1-7),

whereupon Sennacherib sent a threatening letter to Hezekiah,

which he "spread before the Lord" (37:14). The judgement of God

now fell on the Assyrian host. "Like Xerxes in Greece,

Sennacherib never recovered from the shock of the disaster in

Judah. He made no more expeditions against either Southern

Palestine or Egypt." The remaining years of Hezekiah's reign

were peaceful (2 Chr. 32:23, 27-29). Isaiah probably lived to

its close, and possibly into the reign of Manasseh, but the time

and manner of his death are unknown. There is a tradition that

he suffered martyrdom in the heathen reaction in the time of

Manasseh (q.v.).


(2.) One of the heads of the singers in the time of David (1

Chr. 25:3,15, "Jeshaiah").


(3.) A Levite (1 Chr. 26:25).

(4.) Ezra 8:7.

(5.) Neh. 11:7.





Initial text from Easton's Bible Dictionary, 1897 -- Please update as needed