The Book of Isaiah

The Book of Isaiah

Author: Edward J. Young

Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing

Published: 1992-11-30

Total Pages: 612

ISBN-13: 9780802895523

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A classic in conservative Old Testament scholarship, this three-volume commentary concentrates primarily on the meaning of the text of Isaiah rather than on specific textual problems. Volume 1 covers chapters 1-18; Volume 2 looks at chapters 19-39; Volume 3 surveys chapters 40-66.


The Prophecy of Isaiah

The Prophecy of Isaiah

Author: J. Alec Motyer

Publisher: InterVarsity Press

Published: 2015-11-11

Total Pages: 549

ISBN-13: 0830895248

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Presenting a wealth of comment and perspective on the book of Isaiah, J. Alec Motyer pays particular attention to three recurring themes: the messianic hope, the motif of the city, and the theology of the Holy One of Israel. This rich, accessible commentary is a wise, winsome and welcome guide to Isaiah for Christians today.


Isaiah

Isaiah

Author: Leslie J. Hoppe

Publisher: Liturgical Press

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 187

ISBN-13: 0814628478

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Although the circumstances under which this book took its present form remain in scholarly dispute, Leslie Hoppe highlights its literary and theological purposeto provide the people of Judah and Jerusalem with hope for the future and the will to re-embrace their ancestral religious traditions.


Commentary on Isaiah

Commentary on Isaiah

Author: Eusebius of Caesarea

Publisher: InterVarsity Press

Published: 2013-08-01

Total Pages: 369

ISBN-13: 083082913X

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The latest addition to the Ancient Christian Texts series offers a first-ever English translation of Eusebius's Commentary on Isaiah. Expertly rendered with notes and an introduction by Jonathan Armstrong, this volume exposes contemporary readers to the earliest Christian commentary on the prophecy of Isaiah.


Isaiah

Isaiah

Author: J. A. Motyer

Publisher: InterVarsity Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780877842446

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The book of Isaiah is perhaps the most compelling of all Old Testament prophecy. No other prophet rivals Isaiah's brilliance of style, powerful imagery and clear vision of the messianic hope.Isaiah's prophetic ministry begins with his temple vision and calling: "I heard the voice of the Lord saying, 'Whom shall I send?'" Through a series of oracles Isaiah calls Israel and the nations to turn to the Lord, for judgment is coming. He announces that redemption is found in the Davidic Servant alone. Finally, in the "day of vengeance and the year of redemption" the Anointed Conqueror will punish rebellious peoples, comfort the contrite and reestablish the glory of Zion.J. Alec Motyer, author of the unparalleled one-volume commentary The Prophecy of Isaiah, now provides the long-awaited final volume in the Tyndale Old Testament Commentary Series. Unlike many Isaiah commentators who divide the book between chapters 1-39 and 40-66, Motyer instead identifies three messianic portraits: the King (Isaiah 1-37), the Servant (Isaiah 38-55), and the Anointed Conqueror (Isaiah 56-66). This volume provides Motyer's lucid exposition on these three portraits, examining Isaiah with insightful and probing passage-by-passage commentary.All who study the text of Isaiah will find here expert scholarship and solid footing for unraveling difficult issues of exegesis and interpretation.


Commentary on Isaiah

Commentary on Isaiah

Author: St. Thomas Aquinas

Publisher: Emmaus Academic

Published: 2021-06-24

Total Pages: 421

ISBN-13: 1949013855

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Christians have called the Book of Isaiah a “fifth gospel” because of its striking foretelling of the principal mysteries of the life of Jesus. But how do these prophecies of a still far-off Savior relate to the circumstances of Isaiah’s own time? St. Thomas Aquinas’s Commentary on Isaiah is believed to be his first major theological work, produced as part of his academic training as a bachelor of theology. Carefully attending to the language and structure of Isaiah’s prophecy and using Scripture to shed light on Scripture, Aquinas explains how Isaiah’s message brought comfort to Israel and pointed forward to the coming of the Christ.