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Servant of Yahweh in Second Isaiah

Isaianic Servant Passages in Their Literary and Historical Context

by Antony Tharekadavil (Author)
©2007 Monographs VIII, 204 Pages

Summary

The notion implied in the word «servant» necessarily points to someone (the lord) of whom he is the servant. Isaianic notion of the servant is not an exception to this idea: the prophet is not presenting an isolated and abstract concept of a «servant» but he is speaking about the servant of Yahweh. The servant passages in Second Isaiah should therefore be read in relation to other texts that present Yahweh as the Lord. These texts together explain the concept of the servant. The work therefore reads twelve suggested Isaianic servant passages as original and integral parts of Isaiah 40-53. Thirteen texts that present Yahweh as the Lord are also analyzed. The Isaianic idea of the servant appears to be the result of the exilic reinterpretation of the traditional servant of Yahweh concept.

Details

Pages
VIII, 204
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631570791
Language
English
Keywords
Jesaja (Buch) 40-53 Gottesknecht Exilic Israel Yahweh-alone Movement Monotheism Yahweh the Emperor Suffering Servant
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. VIII, 204 pp.

Biographical notes

Antony Tharekadavil (Author)

The Author: Antony Tharekadavil, a priest of the Archdiocese of Thalassery (India), was born in 1965. After his priestly ordination (1993), he worked as a parish priest in the Indian State of Kerala and then as a missionary in Kernataka State until 1998. Since 1998 he had been doing his research in Jerusalem. In 2007 he obtained his Doctorate in Biblical Sciences and Archaeology.

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Title: Servant of Yahweh in Second Isaiah