Collin Leong
Dec 2018
Historical Overview for Book of Isaiah - Part 1
The original name of Isaiah in Hebrew was Yesha'yahu, meaning "YAHWEH is salvation." His message is about judgement on Israel and the hope of salvation from Yahweh, through a coming Messiah.
The prophecies of Isaiah was delivered in Judah between 739 and 681 B.C. For almost 60 years, God had moved kings, wars, and nations, like pieces on a chess board, in order to bring about His prophecies and will around Israel and Judah. Many situations would have changed from chapter 1 to chapter 66.
As such, it is important to understand the historical context of the times when the prophecies were delivered, so that we have a deeper understanding of Isaiah's words and their meanings.
Isaiah prophesied in two major periods. Chapters 1 to 39 were completed around 701 BC, and Chapters 40 to 66 were completed around 681 BC. In this blog, we will attempt to simplify the historical context and purpose of these two parts.
We will cover Part 1 in this blog, and Part 2 in a separate blog.
Part 1: Chapters 1 to 39 (739 to 700 BC)
In this period, the significant parties in history are the divided Kingdom (Israel and Judah), and Assyria. The message was a warning that God will use the uprising of Assyria to punish Israel, the Northern Kingdom. It also warned Judah that if it does not correct its ways of idolatry and injustice, it too will be punished by God but through another foreign kingdom.
The early chapters introduces Assyria, which was eventually used to remove Israel from existence. Chapter 39 ends by describing Hezekiah's (of Judah) reckless liason with the Babylonians, which is a prelude to how God will use the Babylonians to bring justice to Judah within two generations. We shall look at the Babylonians in more detail in Part 2.
A. The Assyrians
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| Assyrian and Conquest Map (Bible-History.Com) |
The Assyrians originated from the land of northern Mesopotamia. It's centre was located in what is now northern Iraq and southeastern Turkey.
It began its expansion around 900 BC by King Adad-Nirari II. In 857 B.C., Shalmaneser III captured the city of Carchemish in Syria. This alerted the cities to the southwest to form alliances in defense against the aggressive Assyria.
Though not mentioned in the Bible, it was said in the Assyrian writings that a coalition involving King Ahab (of Israel, 874-853) battled with Shalmaneser III at Qarqar in 853 B.C. The battle was inconclusive and thereafter Assyria went into a period of dormancy. Shortly after that, Ahab died in the war against Aram (Syria) (See 1 Kings 22).
All was quite until Tiglath-Pileser ((745-727) became king. He is referred to as Pul in the Bible (See 1 Chronicles 5:26).
Pul's military strategy was in 3 stages. The first stage is to force small kingdoms to become vassal states. Vassal states have to pay annual tributes and contribute soldiers to protect the Assyrian's territories. If a a vassal state rebels, Assyria will replace the king with someone more loyal, or at least more willing to co-operate. The size of the kingdom may be reduced and the tributes may increase as a punishment.
Lastly, if the state rebels again, Assyria will use its military power to subjugate the kingdom and kill or exile all its inhabitants. The people will be replaced with a mixture of foreign citizens. This is the ultimate way of ensuring no one in the state will be able to conspire against Assyria again.
In the Assyrian crisis, Judah only experienced the first stage of vassalship, but Israel went through all three stages and was eventually wiped out from the earth.
B. War Between Brothers
After Solomon died in 931BC, his kingdom broke into two. Jeroboam lead the rebellion against Solomon's son and heir, Rehoboam. Only 2 tribes - Judah and the Benjamites - remained loyal to David's line. The other 10 tribes followed Jeroboam and called the northern part of the kingdom their homeland, and Samaria their capital city. It is common to refer to the northern kingdom "Israel", and the southern part "Judah". These two nations of brothers fight against each other all the time.
Sometimes the Bible may use "Israel" to refer to the collective chosen people (descendants of Judah, aka Israel), not to the divided nation in the North. In this blog, however, we will consistently use Israel for the Northen Kingdom and Judah for the Southern Kingdom.
None of Israel's kings were "good", in that none were loyal and obedient to God for over 200 years. Judah, after Solomon, only had 5 or so "good" kings. However the most abominable sin, the sin of idolatry, was never wiped out in either nation.
650 years before, when the Israelites were rescued from Egypt, God had already warned them through Moses:
"All these curses shall come upon you and pursue you and overtake you till you are destroyed, because you did not obey the voice of the LORD your God, to keep his commandments and his statutes that he commanded you. They shall be a sign and a wonder against you and your offspring forever.
...you shall serve your enemies whom the LORD will send against you, in hunger and thirst, in nakedness, and lacking everything...The LORD will bring a nation against you from far away, from the end of the earth, swooping down like the eagle, a nation whose language you do not understand, a hard-faced nation who shall not respect the old or show mercy to the young." (Deut 28:45-50)
Their time of grace was running out. By the 7th century BC, Israel's military was weak and the nation was in a political mess, with regular coups and assassinations to take the power of the throne.
When threatened by Tiglath-Pileser, Menahem (752-742) became the first of Israel's king to submit to vassalship to Assyria. Thereafter, his son Pekahiah (742-740) took over but was quickly assassinated by one of his officers, Pekah (740-732). (See 2 Kings 15:23-25)
In the meantime, down in Judah, King Uzziah (790-739), was struck with "instant" leprosy when he arrogantly went into the temple to burn incense. He was quarantined from that day (750 BC) and his co-regent, Jotham (750-731)
took over the rulership. Uzziah died in 739 BC.
It was during these tumultuous times that God gave Isaiah the vision of the destruction of the Northern Kingdom. His visions came around the time of Uzziah's death, with Jotham in charge in Judah and Pekah dictating Israel.
Pekah then decided to rebel against Assyria, instead of listening to the warnings of Hosea and Isaiah. He allied with Rezin king of Damascus (Aram/Syria), and tried to coerce his enemy-brother Judah to join the conspiracy.
Judah's king, Jotham and his co-regent, Ahaz (735-715), refused. Given the military might of Assyria, it was probably wise not to provoke their anger.
However, Pekah was furious and planned an attack on Judah together with King Rezin. This was after Jotham has died and Ahaz became the sole king of Judah.
Ahaz suffered many casualties in the war, but Judah was not destroyed nor conquered. Second Chronicles 28 described how God sent the prophet Oded to intervene and warned Pekah to leave Judah alone.
Because of Ahaz's idolatry, God brought judgement against Judah from Israel, Aram and also the Edomites and the Philistines - but this was only a mild warning than what will happen to them down the road.
God sent Isaiah's to encourage Ahaz to "be quiet" because God will save Judah this round. And it is here where Ahaz was given the vision of the Messiah - "behold the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel" (Isaiah 7:14).
C. Destruction of the Northern Kingdom
Ignoring Isaiah, Ahaz appealed to Tiglath-Pileser (Pul) for help by offering silver and gold from the temple. In response, Pul took the opportunity to launch a scathing attack on both Israel and Damascus. However, he also increased Assyria's vassal strangle-hold over Judah.
King Rezin was killed by the Assyrians during the attack (2 Kings 16:9). Israel suffered a huge loss and Pul exiled many of the Israelites to Assyria. An Israeli military commander, Hoshea, murdered Pekah and replaced him as Israel's king. (2 Kings 15:29-30). This Assyrian invasion occured around 734-732 BC.
Hoshea continued to pay tribute to Assyria but he was a doubled-face. He made an alliance with Egypt and withheld tribute to Assyria. Egypt at this time was also inferior compared to Assyria.
Shalmeneser V, the son of Pul, and the new king of Assyria, had enough of Hoshea's manipulations and attacked the kingdom in 724 BC. Samaria was besieged and fell in 722 BC. Hoshea was taken prison. (1 Kings 17)
All the Jews in Israel were removed from their homes and dispersed. In their place were brought gentiles from other lands under Assyrian control to locate in Israel.
With the fall of Samaria, the Northern Kingdom ceased to exist. Until today, Israel's ten tribes can no longer be traced. They are known as the "lost tribes" of Israel.
The sins of Israel was described and summarised so that no one will fault God for removing it from the face of the earth:
"They sacrificed their sons and daughters in the fire and practiced divination and soothsaying. They devoted themselves to doing evil in the sight of the LORD, provoking Him to anger. So the LORD was very angry with Israel, and He removed them from His presence. Only the tribe of Judah remained," (2 Kings 17:17-18)
D. Assyrian Attack on Judah
In the meantime, Ahaz became even more proud and evil as he believed he saved Judah by calling out to Assyria. He even re-modeled the Jerusalem temple altar according to the pagan altar he saw in Damascus. Judah's time of grace will not be that long either.
Hezekiah was co-regent with Ahaz from 729 BC, and became sole ruler from 715 onwards. Samaria fell while Hezekiah was already a co-regent.
Hezekiah was considered a "good king", one of only five in the history of Judah (excluding David and Solomon). He removed the idols and Asherah poles from Judah. He refused to serve the Assyrian kingdom.
Sennacherib, the king of Assyria, responded by attacking Judah in 701 BC. They had conquered every city in every nation North of Jerusalem. Hezekiah, being afraid, tried to bribe the Assyrians while they were attacking Lachish with treasures from the temple. However, it didn't work, and they came to Jerusalem, taunting the Judean king and the army. (2 Kings 18:14-16)
The Assyrian commander Rabshakeh even boasted: "Who among all the gods of these lands have delivered their lands out of my hand, that the LORD should deliver Jerusalem out of my hand?"
(Isaiah 36:20)
Adding to the plight, Hezekiah became ill during that time (around 702 BC) and was about to die. However, God gave him another 15 years of life when He prayed, and promised him that He will protect Jerusalem. (Isaiah 38)
Perhaps that was the reason Hezekiah finally sought after God and, through Isaiah, God told him Sennacherib will not enter Jerusalem and will soon retreat. God sent an angel who slew 185,000 men in the Assyrian camp. Sennacherib withdrew and continued other military campaigns until 690BC. He was later killed by his own sons while worshiping the idol Nisroch around 681BC, in Nineveh. (Isaiah 37:36).
However, Hezekiah became proud and showed a delegation of Babylonians all the treasures and weapons in his warehouses, without asking God or Isaiah, and without glorifying God for the salvation of Jerusalem. Because of this, Isaiah prophesied to Hezekiah that one day, the Babylonians will take away all the treasures, and even his descendants, to Babylon.
"Then Isaiah said to Hezekiah, “Hear the word of the LORD: The time will surely come when everything in your palace and all that your fathers have stored up until this day will be carried off to Babylon. Nothing will be left, says the LORD. And some of your descendants, your own flesh and blood, will be taken away to be eunuchs in the palace of the king of Babylon.”" (Isaiah 39:5))
Hezekiah died around 687 BC, and was replaced by Manasseh, another very horrible king. We will talk about Manasseh and the other kings in the Historical Overview Part 2.
E. Epilogue
The prophecy about Israel was also given by Hosea (755-715 BC), a Northern Kingdom prophet contemporary of Pekah. Hosea had a child and God asked him to name her Lo-ruhamah:
"And the LORD said to him, “Name her Lo-ruhamah, for I will no longer have compassion on the house of Israel, that I would ever forgive them. 7“But I will have compassion on the house of Judah and deliver them by the LORD their God, and will not deliver them by bow, sword, battle, horses or horsemen.” (Hosea 1: 6-7)
We don't know what happened to Hosea. It is possible he was exiled during the last days of Israel.
For Judah, God gave them another chance after Hezekiah humbled himself. Manasseh, however, was an extremely evil king that did worse atrocities than Israel's kings.
According to the traditions of Jerusalem Talmud (Sanhedrin x), Manasseh sought to kill Isaiah. Isaiah hid himself in a cedar-tree, but his presence was betrayed by the fringes of his garment, and King Manasseh caused the tree to be sawn in half.
Micah (735-700) was also a contemporary prophet of Isaiah in Judah.
Interestingly, amidst the crisis of the Assyrians, God sent hope to the Jews by pronouncing the coming of the Messiah.
Isaiah prophesied how the Messiah was going to be born (Isaiah 7:14 and 9), and Micah prophesied the place (Bethlehem, Micah 5:2), and Hosea prophesied that He will escape into Egypt (Hosea 11:1). The who, the where, and the what. There is your Christmas story!
E. Summary
Here's a diagram showing the timelines of the kings and prophets during the time of Isaiah.
Key Dates for Part 1
745BC - Manahem submitted to vassalship under
Tiglath-Pileser of Assyria
735BC - Pekah (Israel) allied with King Rezin
(Aram/Syria) and attacked Ahaz (Judah) for refusing to join the rebellion
against Assyria. (2 Chron. 28)
734-732BC - Ahaz bribed Assyria with temple gold.
Tiglath-Pileser attacked Israel and Syria. King Rezin was killed, and Hoshea
murdered Pekah and took over the throne.
724BC - Shalmeneser V attacked Israel and captured
Hoshea, after Hoshea conspired with Egypt to rebel against Assyria.
722BC - Samaria was besieged for 3 years and fell in 722.
This is the end of the Northern Kingdom.
(1 Kings 17)
701BC - Sennacherib attacked Hezekiah, but Judah was miraculously saved. Sennacherib retreated back to Assyria and was killed by his own sons.