ISAIAH
Chapters 40–66
John N. Oswalt
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
Grand Rapids, Michigan / Cambridge, U.K.
© 1998 Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
2140 Oak Industrial Drive N.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49505 /
P.O. Box 163, Cambridge CB3 9PU U.K.
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Oswalt, John.
The book of Isaiah. Chapters 40–66 / John N. Oswalt.
p. cm.
— (The new international commentary on the Old Testament)
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
ISBN 978-0-8028-2534-6 (alk. paper)
1. Bible. O.T. Isaiah XL–LXVI—Commentaries.
2. Bible. O.T. Isaiah XL–LXVI. English. New International. 1997.
I. Title. II. Series.
BS1515.3.084 1998
224′.1077—dc21 97–24215
CIP
Professor Roland K. Harrison
TEXT AND COMMENTARY
iv. The Vocation of Servanthood (40:1–55:13)
v. The Marks of Servanthood: Divine Character (56:1–66:24)
INDEXES
Long ago St. Paul wrote: “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth” (1 Cor. 3:6, NRSV). He was right: ministry indeed requires a team effort—the collective labors of many skilled hands and minds. Someone digs up the dirt and drops in seed, while others water the ground to nourish seedlings to growth. The same team effort over time has brought this commentary series to its position of prominence today. Professor E. J. Young “planted” it forty years ago, enlisting its first contributors and himself writing its first published volume. Professor R. K. Harrison “watered” it, signing on other scholars and wisely editing everyone’s finished products. As General Editor, my hands now tend their planting, and, true to Paul’s words, through four decades God has indeed graciously “[given] the growth.”
Today the New International Commentary on the Old Testament enjoys a wide readership of scholars, priests, pastors, rabbis, and other serious Bible students. Thousands of readers across the religious spectrum and in countless countries consult its volumes in their ongoing preaching, teaching, and research. They warmly welcome the publication of each new volume and eagerly await its eventual transformation from an emerging “series” into a complete commentary “set.” But as humanity experiences a new century of history, an era commonly called “postmodern,” what kind of commentary series is NICOT? What distinguishes it from other similarly well-established series?
Its volumes aim to publish biblical scholarship of the highest quality. Each contributor writes as an expert, both in the biblical text itself and in the relevant scholarly literature, and each commentary conveys the results of wide reading and careful, mature reflection. Ultimately, its spirit is eclectic, each contributor gleaning ...
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About The Book of Isaiah, Chapters 40–66The second of John N. Oswalt’s two-part study of the book of Isaiah for the NICOT series, this commentary provides exegetical and theological exposition on the latter twenty-seven chapters of Isaiah for scholars, pastors, and students who seek to know the perennial meaning of the text in contemporary terms. Though Oswalt’s main introduction to Isaiah is found in his commentary on chapters 1–39, this second volume opens with an important discussion of scholarly debate over the unity/diversity of Isaiah. In this work Oswalt makes stronger his case for reading the entire book of Isaiah as written by a single author—a position not common in other recent commentaries. Oswalt’s work stands alone, then, as an attempt to take seriously Israel’s historical situation at the time chapters 40–66 were composed while also seeking to understand how these chapters function as a part of Isaiah’s total vision written in the late 700s or early 600s b.c. Assuming the single authorship of Isaiah, the verse-by-verse commentary aims to interpret chapters 40–66 in light of the book as a whole. While not neglecting issues of historical criticism or form criticism, the commentary focuses mainly on the theological meaning of the text as indicated especially by the literary structure. Building on his earlier argument that the central theme of Isaiah is servanthood, Oswalt keeps readers focused on the character of Israel’s sovereign Redeemer God, on the blind servant Israel, and on the ultimate work of the Suffering Servant in whom the world can find its Savior. |
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