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INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH
R. K. Harrison, in Introduction to the OT, comments on this subject,
"Arguments from literary style were greatly in vogue at the end of the nineteenth century, but in the light of a much wider knowledge of ancient Near Eastern languages they have now assumed a far less important position. The very subjectivity of stylistic considerations had a great appeal for the adherents of the Graf-Wellhausen theory of literary analysis, who saw no inconsistency whatever in perusing material ascribed to a Biblical author, and then denying parts of that very corpus to him because the literary form and vocabulary of each chapter did not happen to be identical. Apparently it did not occur to those early investigators that it was only possible to derive some concept of the style of an ancient author as the result of careful study of all the material ascribed to him, and that subsequent rejection of part or all of that corpus could only be validated on the basis of some rigorous external control" (p. 776).
Volume 1 | Volume 2 | |
Isaiah 1-5 Isaiah 6-8 Isaiah 9-12 Isaiah 13-23 Isaiah 24-27 Isaiah 28-31 Isaiah 32-33 |
ruin and restoration biographical material agents of divine blessing and judgment oracles against foreign powers universal redemption and the deliverance of Israel ethical sermons the restoration of the nation |
Isa. 34-35 Isa. 36-40 Isa. 41-45 Isa. 46-48 Isa. 49-55 Isa. 56-59 Isa. 60-66 |
NIV | Leupold | |
Isaiah 7-12 | "Prophecies occasioned by the Aramean and Israelite threat against Judah" | "Immanuel Book" |
Isaiah 28-33 | "Six Woes: Five on the Unfaithful in Israel and One on Assyria" | "The Book of Zion" (the Cornerstone) |
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