Seeler
Well-Known Member
I love the prophets: Isaiah is a favourite of mine. Jesus seemed to be fond of these writings too.
Ch. 5 reads like a simple story of a man planting and taking care of a vineyard, protecting it from outside with a hedge and a watchtower, preparing for an abundant harvest - but it grew bitter grapes. He compares it to the corruption in Judah and Jerusalem. And he predicts that they will be destroyed. The people expected justice but saw bloodshed. Those in power joined house to house, field to field creating a landless class. They are proud; they call evil good and good evil. They deprive the innocent of their rights;; they reject the instructions of the Lord. A parable; a warning; a prophecy.
In chapter 6, Isaiah tells of his call: 'In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord...'Uzziah, was followed by his son Jotham, then his grandson Ahaz. During Ahaz' reign the nations of Aram and Israel attack Jerusalem. Ahaz consults with Isaiah, and Ahaz asks for a sign that they will not be destroyed. Isaiah reassures him that 'a young woman (virgin) ...shall bear a son. Before the child knows how to refuse the evil and choose the good, the land before whose two kings you are in dread will be deserted.' The ancestral house of King Ahaz, a descendant of David, will be saved.
Chapter 8 tells of Isaiah and 'the prophetess' having a son. And before that son is old enough to talk, Assyria will defeat Damascus and Samaria.
The reading plan now switches to the prophet Amos. I'll read that tonight.
Ch. 5 reads like a simple story of a man planting and taking care of a vineyard, protecting it from outside with a hedge and a watchtower, preparing for an abundant harvest - but it grew bitter grapes. He compares it to the corruption in Judah and Jerusalem. And he predicts that they will be destroyed. The people expected justice but saw bloodshed. Those in power joined house to house, field to field creating a landless class. They are proud; they call evil good and good evil. They deprive the innocent of their rights;; they reject the instructions of the Lord. A parable; a warning; a prophecy.
In chapter 6, Isaiah tells of his call: 'In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord...'Uzziah, was followed by his son Jotham, then his grandson Ahaz. During Ahaz' reign the nations of Aram and Israel attack Jerusalem. Ahaz consults with Isaiah, and Ahaz asks for a sign that they will not be destroyed. Isaiah reassures him that 'a young woman (virgin) ...shall bear a son. Before the child knows how to refuse the evil and choose the good, the land before whose two kings you are in dread will be deserted.' The ancestral house of King Ahaz, a descendant of David, will be saved.
Chapter 8 tells of Isaiah and 'the prophetess' having a son. And before that son is old enough to talk, Assyria will defeat Damascus and Samaria.
The reading plan now switches to the prophet Amos. I'll read that tonight.