Sunday, August 25, 2024

Seder 37: Isaiah 29---Judgment, then Hope

 The biblical prophets often follow warnings of judgment with messages of hope.  Hope is the final word, but unless the people repent, they will have to endure judgment before reaching that final step.

We see such a pattern in Isaiah 29, which refers to the people of Judah as an ``altar hearth'' (a probable translation of "Ariel", as in Ezekiel 43:15-16).  The people often assume that if they carry out the Temple riturals correctly, God will be obligated to bless them (verses 1,13), and they will be safe from the kind of foreign invasion that befell their brothers in the northern kingdom of Israel.  

But from God's point of view, the people are not truly worshiping him; they are just going through the motions.  As a result, they will eventually face judgment.  Jerusalem will be like an altar hearth with the kingdom of Judah as the sacrificial victim (verse 2).  

Verse 4 pictures the nation brought low like the dust.  Commentator John Oswalt sees a possible allusion to some kind of worship of the dead and occult activity going on in Judah.  

The God of Israel is also the King over all nations, and he will judge the nations too (verses 5-8). Jerusalem's enemies may see themselves devouring the holy city, but it will be like a person dreaming about a big dinner and waking up hungry.  

Sadly, the people of Judah at this point are just as blind as their enemies, both because they have blinded themselves and because God has then chosen to leave them blind (vv 9-14).  When people do not want to hear God's word, sometimes he will let them have their way for awhile.  

Some royal counselors were recommending that Judah turn to Egypt for help against Assyria (see chapters 30-31).  It may be these counselors who are in view in Isaiah 29:15-16, those who are trying to hide their plans from God--i.e., hide their plans from God's prophet Isaiah.  

Judah instead should trust God for deliverance, Isaiah says.  God ultimately would bring spiritual transformation to the nation, including an end to the blindness described in verses 11-12.  Righteousness, justice, and prosperity would come to the land (verses 18-24).  

Verse 8, with its reference to dreams, links Isaiah 29 with Genesis 41 in Jewish tradition.  The kind of reversal described at the end of Isaiah 29 might also be compared with Joseph's coming to power in Genesis 41.       

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