Isaiah 40-55: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary
Joseph Blenkinsopp
Doubleday, 2002 - 411 pages
Scholars have traditionally isolated three distinct sections of what is known as the Book of Isaiah, and in Isaiah 40—55,
distinguished biblical scholar Joseph Blenkinsopp provides a new
translation and critical commentary on the section usually referred to
as Second or Deutero Isaiah. The second volume in a three-volume
commentary, it easily maintains the high standards of academic
excellence established by Isaiah 1—39.Second
Isaiah was written in the sixth century b.c.e., in the years just before
the fall of the mighty Babylonian Empire, by an anonymous prophet whom
history has erroneously identified with the real Isaiah (born ca. 765
b.c.e.). Scholars know Second Isaiah was written by someone other than
Isaiah because the contexts of these prophecies are so very different.
When Second Isaiah was written, the prophet believed that Israel’s time
of suffering was drawing to a close. There was, he insisted, a new age
upon them, a time of hope, peace, and renewed national prosperity. The
main thrust of the prophet’s argument was intended to rally the spirits
of a people devastated by war and conquest. One of the most famous
examples of this optimistic tone is the well-known and beloved Song of
the Suffering Servant, which is found in Chapters 52—53, and about which
Blenkinsopp has some challenging new ideas. The final chapters
of Second Isaiah, however, are in an entirely different key as it
becomes clear that the new world the prophet foresaw earlier was not
going to come to pass. This despair finds its most poignant expression
in the final section of the Book of Isaiah, which Blenkinsopp will
address in his forthcoming third volume.
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