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11. The Socalled Servant Songs

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Title: 11. The Socalled Servant Songs


1
11. The So-called Servant Songs
  • BOT634 Exegesis of Isaiah

2
THE SO-CALLED - SERVANT SONGS
  • Isaiah 42.1-4 (5-9)
  • Isaiah 49.1-6
  • Isaiah 50.4-9
  • Isaiah 52.13-53.12

3
Intra-Biblical - Canonical Interpretation
  • 1. At the outset we may lay aside all anxiety as
    to the bearings of these passages on the claims
    of the New Testament. If the passages represent
    the Servant to be a person different from Israel,
    then the New Testament claims that what is said
    concerning that person is fulfilled in Jesus. If
    on the other hand we find that the Servant, in
    these passages, is still Israel, we shall also
    find that the New Testament claim is that Jesus
    Christ is Israel the Servant in his highest
    manifestation. In either case the passages are
    messianic, and in either case the New Testament
    claims that they are fulfilled in Jesus the
    Messiah. Beecher, Willis J., The Servant,
    originally from The Prophets and the Promise,
    1903, The Baker Book House Reprint) pp. 263-88,
    but cited from Walter C. Kaiser, Jr., ed.
    Classical Evangelical Essays in Old Testament
    Interpretation, 194

4
Introduction to the so-called Servant Songs
5
Intra-Biblical - Canonical Interpretation
  • 2. First, while it is obvious that the Servant
    motif is used Christologically (e.g. Matt 8.17,
    12.15-21, Mark 10.45, Luke 22.37, Acts 8.30-35
    and Phil 2.6-7), it should not be overlooked that
    Acts 13.46-47 clearly show that the same motif
    could also be applied to the Church For so the
    Lord has commanded us, saying, I have set you to
    be a light for the Gentiles.... Secondly, it
    should be remembered that language and imagery
    that are used of Israel in the Old Testament are
    often applied to Jesus in the New Testament. See
    for instance Matt 2.15 (quoting Hos 11.1 Out of
    Egypt have I called my son.), Matt 4.1-11 (the
    testing of Gods Son recapitulates Gods testing
    of Israel in the desert, Deuteronomy 8) and John
    15.1-6 (Jesus as the true vine, cf. Israel as the
    vine in Hos 10.1, Ezekiel 15, 17.1-10, 19.10-14
    and Ps 80.9-14). Mettinger, A Farewell to the
    Servant Songs A Critical Examination of an
    Exegetical Axiom, 46

6
Gattung of the so-called Servant Songs
  • 1. Baltzer interprets these texts as part of a
    biography, in which the information we received
    concerning the office and function of the subject
    describes him as a prophet.... If Baltzers
    thesis is correct, then we are confronted by a
    surprising reduction which only includes the
    installation of the Servant (42.1 ff.), his
    designation (49.1 ff.), and death (chap. 53).
    Mettinger, Ibid., 16

7
Gattung of the so-called Servant Songs
  • 2. As earlier form-critical studies have taught
    us, 42.1-4 is most likely a (royal) designation,
    49.1-6 is related to the confessions of Jeremiah,
    50.4-9 is a psalm of confidence, 53.1-6 has
    elements in common with a psalm of thanksgiving,
    while 52.13-15 and 53.11-12 make up a framework
    which is reminiscent of a salvation oracle.
    However, while the texts themselves reveal
    connections to traditional genres, it is clear
    that their author was not confined by convention.
    Thus I would return a verdict of not proven on
    the hypothesis that the Servant Songs once
    comprised the biography of a prophet. I agree
    rather with Westermann and Melugin that, as far
    as genre is concerned, the Servant Songs are
    heterogeneous. Mettinger, Ibid., 17

8
The Structure of Isaiah 40-55 and the so-called
Servant Songs
9
Contextually Unrelated ?
  • 1. In the commentary we have adopted the
    position that the Songs are not related to the
    context except for the response which follows the
    first three Songs (xlii 5-9, xlix 7-13, l 10-11).
    That the Songs and the responses can be removed
    from the context without any interruption is
    suggestive, but it is not convincing several
    passages in Second Isaiah could be removed or
    rearranged without violence. The unity of Second
    Isaiah is not so rigorously organized that one
    passage always flows from and leads to another.
    But the Songs are more of an interruption than
    any other passage which might be placed
    elsewhere. McKenzie, The Anchor Bible Second
    Isaiah, xxxix

10
Contextually Unrelated ?
  •  2. The word servant occurs twenty times in
    chaps. 4055 (once in the plural). There is
    agreement that thirteen of the occurrences refer
    to Israel as the servant. The remaining seven
    occur in 4214 4916 5049 52135312, and
    the verses connected to them (4557 5010, 11),
    the servant songs of B. Duhm. In these
    passages, according to Duhm, the servant is an
    individual, not Israel On the contrary, the
    hero of these poems is set over against the
    people, is innocent, Yahwehs disciple clearly
    enlightened by him, called to a mission to the
    people and to the gentiles and attending to his
    call in complete calm. The poems are probably
    from an author different from Second Isaiah and
    were inserted awkwardly in their present context
    (Duhm Jesaia HKAT, 311). Freedman, David Noel,
    ed., The Anchor Bible Dictionary, (New York
    Doubleday) 1997, 1992., s. v., Isaiah.

11
Mettinger's Structural Analysis
12
The Hymns of Praise in Second Isaiah
  • 1. The best point of departure for an analysis
    of the composition in chap. 40-55 is provided by
    the hymns of praise which ornament the work like
    jewels on a crown. These may be quite simply
    identified as including 42.10-13 44.23 45.8
    48.20-21 49.13 51.3 (fragmentary) 52.9-10 and
    54.1-3. In terms of contents we should to these
    passage add the prologue and epilogue of the
    book, 40.9-11 and 55.12-13. Just as the hymns in
    the Book of Amos have been considered to play a
    compositional role, it seems likely that the
    hymns of praise in Isaiah 40-55 do so as well.
    Mettinger, Ibid., 19

13
The Hymns of Praise in Second Isaiah
  • 2. The hymns of Amos, 4.13 5.8-9 9.5-6
  • 3. Let us once again examine the position of the
    hymns of praise 42.10-13 44.23 45.8 48.20-21
    49.13 51.3 54.1-3 In three places we find
    relatively short sections of text.... The middle
    term of these sections is 49.1-12.... 49.1-12 is
    bracketed by hymns like a gemstone in its
    mounting, thus bringing the text in relief.
    Similarly, we find two other relatively short
    sections situated between hymns these are the
    Cyrus section in 44.24-45.7 and the fourth
    Servant Song in 52.13-53.12. This is evident
    even when we consider... that the hymn of praise
    in 54.1-3 is attached to the following section.
    Thus the compositional situation of these three
    sections sets them in high relief.

14
The Hymns of Praise in Second Isaiah
  • Of these three sections we shall especially pay
    attention to 49.1-12. The observation that this
    passage is set in relief by the two hymns
    surrounding it is further supported by the fact
    that the section is situated on one of the more
    important divisions in the corpus. After 49.14
    ff. we encounter passages which to
    Zion-Jerusalem, which is not the case with the
    first part of the book, where the concept of
    Israel is correspondingly emphasized. In
    approximately the middle of each half of the book
    we find sections of highly significant content,
    and both are bracketed between hymns of praise
    the Cyrus oracle and the text dealing with the
    Man of Sorrow. Mettinger, Ibid., 20-21

15
The Prologue and the Epilogue of Isaiah 40-55
  • 1. Mettinger argues that 40.1-31 is the prologue
    (contra Melugins 40.1-11, with 40.1-8
    anticipating chap. 41-48 and 40.9-11 pointing
    forward toward the Zion-Jerusalem motif of
    chap. 49-55.)
  • 1.1 40.12-26, speaks about Gods cosmic
    greatness and omnipotence and thus anticipates
    the later debate as to who is really God, which
    is located in chap. 41-48, but not later in the
    book. Mettinger, Ibid., 21-22

16
The Prologue and the Epilogue of Isaiah 40-55
  • 1.2 40.27-31, offers a rebuttal of Israels lack
    of faith in the form of a disputation the Lord
    is aware of Israels misfortune. This theme seems
    already to play a part in the first half of the
    book (cf. 42.18 ff., on the blind Servant a
    section which obviously recalls 40.27 ff.), but
    it is especially explored with the poignancy of
    metaphor in the second half of the work. The fact
    that the Lord has not abandoned Israel runs like
    a Leitmotif throughout chap. 49.14-55.5....
    Mettinger, Ibid., 22

17
The Prologue and the Epilogue of Isaiah 40-55
  • 1.3 The xn theme of 40.1 is repeated in 49.13b
    51.3a 52.9b (three hymns of praise).... I
    submit that this relationship emphasizes the
    compositional role of the hymns of praise.
    Mettinger, ibid., 22
  • 1.4 Epilogue 55.10-11 links with 40.6-8.

18
(No Transcript)
19
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • 1. In the first place, there are numerous
    connections between the two main parts of the
    book which are evident in 49.1-12 (or, rather,
    48.20-49.13, if we also take account of the
    hymnic setting).... Mettinger, Ibid., 23
  • Concealment of the Servant 49.2 40.27 51.16
  • Description of the path of the new Exodus
    49.9-12 (40.3-5 41.17-20 42.14-17 43.14-21)
    and (49.14-26 51.9-16 52.11-12
  • that my salvation may reach to the end of the
    earth 49.6b 52.10 40.5

20
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • 2. In conclusion that 49.1-12 is the central
    section which at one and the same time both
    separates the two parts of the book is further
    substantiated by the previously unnoticed
    interplay between the hymns of praise. The
    Exodus hymn in 48.20-21 which immediately
    precedes 49.1-12 reveals a rapport with 52.7-12,
    where we find the same combination of hymn and
    Exodus motif (v. 9-10, 11-12). Further, the hymn
    which immediately follows 49.1-12 has the same
    structure as the hymn of praise in 44.23 and
    exhibits verbal similarities to this text....
    44.23 49.13.... Mettinger, Ibid., 24

21
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
22
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • 2.1 Accordingly, the compositional structure of
    the work suggests a bipartite arrangement
    comprised of 41.1-48.19 and 49.14-55.5,
    respectively. This observation agrees with the
    fact that the first part of the book speaks of
    Israel and Jacob, while the latter part speaks of
    Zion and Jerusalem. Furthermore, Cyrus only plays
    a significant part in the fist part of the book.
    Mettinger, Ibid., 25

23
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
24
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • 2.2 Now, just as the Ebed-section in 49.1-12 is
    emphasized by two hymns of praise, the Cyrus
    oracle in 44.24-45.7 is framed between two hymns.
    If we seek a parallel to the Cyrus oracle in the
    latter half of the book, the interplay between
    the hymns of praise which was demonstrated above
    would lead us to expect that it was located
    between the hymns in 51.3 and 52.7-12. But this,
    however, is not the case, as the passage which
    apparently corresponds to the Cyrus oracle is the
    Ebed-section 52.13-53.12, the text concerning the
    Man of Sorrows. Just as the Ebed-section in
    49.1-12 follows an Exodus hymn (48.20-21), this
    Ebed-section succeeds the Exodus hymn in
    52.7-12.... This analysis is confirmed by an
    examination of the structure of chap. 41-42.

25
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • Chap. 41.1-5 is a law suit which alludes to
    Cyrus. This section is followed by the
    significant passage 41.8-13, which accounts for
    the election of the Servant Israel. Yet another
    law suit alluding to Cyrus (41.21-29 cf. v. 25)
    follows somewhat later, and it is correspondingly
    succeeded by a section featuring the Servant
    (42.1-9). The compositional unit composed of
    41.1-42.9 is rounded off with the hymn in
    42.10-13, which.... closes the entire section
    beginning in 41.1 ff. To my way of thinking the
    conclusion is inescapable that the texts plays
    Cyrus and the Servant. This is true of 41.1-42.9.
    What is most important is that the same play is
    also to be found in the book as a whole, since
    Cyrus and the Servant are counterpoised against
    each other in the two gemstone sections in
    44.24-45.7 and 52.13-53.12.... Mettinger,
    Ibid., 25

26
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • 2.3 This understanding of the composition is
    also confirmed by the striking parallelism of the
    expressions concerning Cyrus and the (ebed. Both
    figures are called by name (45.3, 49.1), and
    their hands are grasped by the Lord (45.1 41.9,
    10, 13 42.1, 6). Finally, both men are
    commissioned to carry out the will of the Lord
    (44.28 53.10b). The relationship between Cyrus
    and the Servant in the first part of the book is
    positive, whereas if we examine the book as a
    whole we can not avoid being struck by the
    contrast between Cyrus and the anti-hero, the
    Man of Sorrows. The two halves of the book also
    evince a similar contrast between Babylon and
    Zion.

27
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
  • The description of Cyrus activity unavoidably
    leads to the description of the humiliation and
    fall of Babylon (chap. 46-47). Correspondingly,
    in the second half of the book the text featuring
    the Man of Sorrow is followed by the description
    of the glory of Zion. The connection between
    Babylon and Zion is emphasized by the fact that
    each is referred to as daughter (47.1, 5
    52.2). Mettinger, Ibid., 26

28
The Compositional Function of the Servant Songs
29
Mettingers Summary
  • 1. We have observed that 49.1-12 serves an
    important compositional function as a bridge
    between the two halves of the book. The numerous
    connections pointed out above between this
    section and the two parts of the book show it to
    be extraordinarily well integrated into the
    structure of the book. Mettinger, Ibid., 26

30
Mettingers Summary
  • 2. Just as it would be inappropriate to excise
    the Cyrus oracle in 44.24-45.7 from its context,
    it would also be incorrect to regard the fourth
    Servant Song in 52.13-53.12 as a secondary
    addition. Such an operation would lame the
    patient and would without fail result in a
    compositional imbalance between the two parts of
    the book, since the text dealing with the Man of
    Sorrow corresponds to the Cyrus oracle.
    Mettinger, Ibid., 26, 28

31
Mettingers Summary
  • 3. The function the first Servant Song
    (42.1-9) is to be sought within the compositional
    entity composed of 41.1-42.13. This structure
    reveals that 42.1-9 is probably to be seen as a
    companion piece to 41.8-13 (the election of the
    Servant Israel) rather than to be associated with
    an (hypothetical) series of special Servant
    Songs. Mettinger, Ibid., 28

32
The Texts in Isaiah
33
General Comments
  • 1. A series of 4 songs that
  • 1.1 seem to be out of context in their present
    location
  • 1.2 First 3 have responses McKenzie, AB Second
    Isaiah,
  • 1.3 Style 1st 4th God speaks of the servant
    in the third person.
  • 2nd 3rd Servant speaks of God in the
    third person.
  • 1.4 The four text can stand together, but they
    dont presuppose one another.
  • 2. The 4 songs are cryptic by nature Exegesis
    will not solve all the questions Who is this
    servant? How does he relate to the other servants
    mentioned in 40-55?

34
General Comments
  • Are there other "Servant Song" Passages?
  • Isaiah 49.7-13
  • Isaiah 42.5-9
  • Isaiah 50.10f.
  • Isaiah 42.19-21
  • Isaiah 48.14-16
  • Isaiah 51.4-8
  • Isaiah 51.9-16
  • Isaiah 61.1ff.

35
History of Interpretation
  • 1. Collective Interpretation
  • 1.1 Israel
  • 1.2 Core of Israel
  • 1.3 Idealized Israel
  • 2. Individual Interpretation
  • 2.1 Historical Person of the Past (Zerubbable,
    Cyrus, Moses, Isaiah)
  • 2.2 Historical Person of the Future (Jesus
    Messiah)
  • 3. Ideal Figure not expected to be fulfilled.

36
42.1-4 The Mission of the Servant
  • 1. Context 41.1-7 highlighted the fear among
    idols worshipers when God sent his envoy Cyrus
    against Babylon. But 41.8-20 assured the helpless
    servant Israel that they had nothing to fear from
    their God, who was shaping the events of history
    to bless them. 41.21-29 intensified the attack by
    emphasizing Gods ability to tell the future,
    something the idols could not do. Now, in 42.1-9,
    God foretells how, through his Servant, his
    beneficial order (mispa4t) will come to rule
    over the world. Thus 42.1-9 is the specific
    conclusion to 41.21-42.9, and the general
    conclusion to 41.1-42.9. Oswalt, John, The Book
    of Isaiah 40-66 The New International Commentary
    on the Old Testament, 108

37
42.1-4 The Mission of the Servant
  • 2. Structure
  • 42.1 Relationship with God
  • 42.2-4 Nature of his Ministry
  • 3. Interpretative Crux Prophet or King?
  • 4. Justice ". . . the divine mispa4t that the
    Servant will establish is nothing less than the
    salvation of God in its broadest sense.
    Oswalt, John, The Book of Isaiah 40-66 The New
    International Commentary on the Old Testament,
    110

38
49.1-6
  • 1. Structure
  • 49.1a Address to the Foreign Nations
  • 49.1b-3 The election, call and equipment of the
    Servant
  • 49.4 His despondency
  • 49.5-6 His new task.
  • 2. Interpretative Crux Servant as Israel
  • 3. Major Thrust "I will give you as a light to
    the nations, that my salvation may reach to the
    ends of the earth."
  • 4. ". . . the ministry to Israel is subsidiary
    and as it were by the way." North

39
50.4-9
  • 1. Form "The most obvious points are the
    affinities between 50.4-9 and the confidence
    motifs in Jeremiahs laments (11.20 15.15, 16
    17.14 20.11, 12 18.23) the affinities with the
    certainty of being answered, which approximates
    to the motif just mentioned (11.20 20.11, 12)
    and to the fact that a protestation of innocence
    is often combined with a confidence motif (11.19
    12.3 15.10, 16 18.20 20.12). But these are the
    very three motifs which we found built into
    50.4-9. Westermann, Claus, Isaiah 40-66 OTL,
    227

40
50.4-9
  • 2. "The mission to Israel was, in the purpose of
    Yhweh . . . . Ancillary to the mission to the
    Gentiles, and it is probably that 49.6 should be
    interpreted as indicating, not that the servant
    was the carry on both parts of his mission
    simultaneously, but that he was to leave the
    first part unfulfilled and like Paul and Barnabas
    'turn to the Gentiles' (Acts 13.46)." North

41
52.13-53.12 Structure
  • 1. Unity of the Whole The fourth servant song
    is in two parts. What certain people say,
    53.1-11a, is set within the framework of
    something that God says 52.13ff. and 53.11b-12.
    Both parts speak of the Servant in the third
    person. The utterance contained in the framework
    bears the stamp of an announcement, and its
    subject is the Servant. The central portion is a
    report, the Servant again being its subject. What
    links the two is the fact that both tell of the
    Servants humiliation and exaltation.
    Westermann, OTL Isaiah 40-66, 255

42
52.13-53.12 Structure
  • 2. ...form, namely, the Songs affinities with
    thanksgiving psalms such as Psalms 30 and 54, in
    which the psalmist recalls adverse circumstances,
    whether of a personal or national nature, and
    then offers thanks for deliverance. While the
    author of our passage clearly has drawn upon this
    genre, the adaptation is undertaken with great
    freedom, as seen especially in the fact that
    whereas the thanksgiving psalms are written in
    the first person, this passage begins and ends
    with divine speech and in between presents a
    third-person voice that describes the suffering
    of the Servant." Hanson, Interpretation Isaiah
    40-66, 154

43
52.13-53.12 Context
  • 1. The poem as a whole is one of triumph, as the
    opening and closing strophes plainly show. Thus
    they suit the context very well. Indeed the major
    motif of the great reversal in 49.1-52.12 and
    52.13-53.12 is the same and is continued in chap.
    54. Detailed study confirms the connection of our
    poem both with what precedes and with what
    follows. The stress on the arm of Yahweh, the
    purpose of Yahweh, the parallelism of nations and
    kings, the words bare and carried, the
    extraordinary emphasis on affliction (50.5-6
    51.17-23 54.11 cf. 52.2-6), and many other
    similar phenomena argue strongly for Second
    Isaiahs authorship of the poem and for its
    present position in the collection. Muilenburg,
    The Interpreters Bible Isaiah 40-66, Vol. 5,
    615

44
Isaiah 52.13-53.12 An Outline
  • 52.13 Announcement of the Exaltation
  • 52.14-15 The Development of this
  • 52.14 Earlier many were aghast at him
    (humiliation)
  • 52.15 Now kings and nations are astonished at
    his exaltation
  • 53.1-11a Report on the Servant's Suffering and
    Exaltation
  • 53.1 Introduction we never dreamt of what we
    have been told

45
Isaiah 52.13-53.12 An Outline
  • 53.2-9 Report on the Servant's Sufferings
  • 53.2 He grew up parched and was insignificant
  • 53.3 He was despised
  • 53.4-9 His suffering had been caused by our guilt
  • 53.4 he (bore) we (supposed him)
  • 53.5 he (was smitten) we (because of our sins)
  • 53.6 we (each his own way) he (Yahweh laid our
    iniquity on him)

46
Isaiah 52.13-53.12 An Outline
  • 53.7 he suffered submissively (was made to appear
    in court)
  • 53.8 he was killed (put to death for our sins)
  • 53.9 buried with transgressors (although there
    was nothing guilty about him)
  • 53.10-11a Report on the Servant's deliverance
  • 53.10a God turned to him ( took pleasure in him)

47
Isaiah 52.13-53.12 An Outline
  • 53.10b God's intervention on the Servant's
    behalf (he healed)
  • 53.10c-11a The consequence for the Servant of the
    intervention (future tense)
  • 53.11b-12 The Divine Oracle (continuation of
    52.13ff.)
  • 53.11b my Servant will procure righteousness,
    bear sins
  • 53.12a I will give him a return for his work
  • 53.12b because he gave up his life and accepted
    shame
  • 53.12c thus he bore sins and became intercessor

48
N.T. Use of Isaiah 52.13-53.12
  • 1. One of the first tasks of the Church in
    defense of its claims was to explain the
    suffering and death of Jesus as Messiah Litwak,
    K. D., The Use of Quotations from Isaiah
    52.13-53.12 in the New Testament, JETS, 26/4
    (1983), p. 386

49
N.T. Use of Isaiah 52.13-53.12
  • 2. 7 Major Quotations of Isaiah 52.13-53.12
  • 2.1 Passion Apologetics
  • Matthew 8.17
  • Luke 22.37
  • Acts 8.32-33
  • John 12.38
  • Romans 10.16
  • 2.2 Justification for Pauls Preaching in
    Unevangelized Areas Romans 15.21
  • 2.3 Moral Admonition 1 Peter 2.22

50
N.T. Use of Isaiah 52.13-53.12
  • 3. The Gospel of Mark and the Theme of the
    Suffering Servant
  • 3.1 Death Prediction Passages
  • Mark 8.31-33
  • Mark 9.31-32
  • Mark 10.33-34
  • 3.2 Gospel of Mark as an extended Passion
    Narrative
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