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A
Jewish View of the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 52-53
by
Alyza
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52:13-14 "Indeed, My
servant shall prosper, be exalted and raised to great
heights. Just as the many were appalled at him--so marred
was his appearance, unlike that of man, his form, beyond
human semblance--just so he shall startle many nations." |
Israel is the servant of the L-RD spoken
of here, always the Hebrew is singular, it is corporate Israel that is
being spoken of here, the people as a whole. Isaiah 41:8-9 says "But
you, Israel, are my servant, Jacob whom I have chosen, the seed
of Abraham my friend. You whom I have taken from the ends of the earth,
and called you from its farthest corners, and said to you, You are my
servant; I have chosen you, and [will] not cast you away."
Isaiah 44:1-2 says "Yet now hear, O Jacob my servant; and Israel,
whom I have chosen;. Thus says the L-RD who made you, and formed you
from the womb, who will help you; Fear not, O Jacob, my servant; and
you, Jeshurun, whom I have chosen.". Isaiah 44:21 again tells us
that Israel is G-d's servant: "Remember these, O Jacob and Israel;
for you are my servant; I have formed you; you are my servant; O
Israel, you shall not be forgotten by me." Is important to note
that the very next verse (44:22) says that, "I have blotted out, as a
thick cloud, your transgressions, and, as a cloud, your sins; return to
me; for I have redeemed you." G-d has already redeemed the Jews from
our sins, all we have to do is return to Him, to follow His ways in the
Torah--as it says in Psalm 32:5 "Then I acknowledged my sin to You; I
did not cover up my guilt...and You forgave the guilt of my sin."
Further references to Israel as G-d's servant are found in Isaiah 45:4,
48:20 and 49:3.
Now, let's look at the context of Isaiah
52-53 to see if the servant is also Israel there. The two chapters are
connected, and form a continuous message. Isaiah 52:4-6 makes it clear
that the servant is again Israel: "For thus says the L-RD G-d, My
people went down the first time to Egypt to sojourn there; and the
Assyrian oppressed them without cause. Now therefore, what have I here,
says the L-RD, that My people is taken away for nothing? Those who rule
over them howl, says the L-RD; and My Name continually every day is
blasphemed. Therefore My people shall know My Name; therefore they shall
know in that day that I am He who speaks; behold, here I am." Notice
that a group of people is being spoken about (people is a collective
singular here), one that was in Egypt and Assyria. That people is
Israel.
In verse 13, that same people is spoken
of as "My servant". Israel is indeed the servant spoken of here. G-d is
telling us here that, in the end, Israel will prosper and take its
rightful place in G-d's plan. But before that happens, Israel (i.e. the
Jewish people) will be perceived as marred and unlike other men in
appearance. We have been seen by others as demons, devils, rats, other
than human. Our life to them has been cheap. When my dad was in basic
training for the Korean war, a non-Jewish man from a different part of
the country kept staring at him. My dad asked him why he was staring.
The man asked my dad where his horns were, because he had been told all
Jews had horns. The Jewish people have certainly been perceived as
demonic by many, having horns and a tail. We have also be painted with
enormous hooked noses and stooped backs, and perceived as having a odd,
Jewish aroma. We have been painted as sacrificing Christian children to
the "Devil" that controls us, and using the blood in our matzos. We have
been accused of poisoning wells and desecrating hosts. Our skin has been
used to make lamps, our hair to make cloth. To those who hate us, we are
beyond human semblance. Many have been startled to find out we are not
demons and have no horns.
Jesus, on the other hand, looked exactly
like a man. There are no stories in the New Testament of Jesus
astonishing people with his looks, with Jesus having horns, tails, and
the like. This is not about Jesus, it is about Israel.
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Isaiah 52:15 "Just so he
shall startled many nations. Kings shall be silenced because
of him, For they shall see what has not been told them,
Shall behold what they never have heard." |
We startled many nations by our very
survival when they thought we should disappear, but we did not. We have
startled many nations by our importance, and by our major contributions
to the world in many fields, beyond our small numbers. Such a reviled
people, such a small people who, in their view to this very day, should
not exist anymore, will come as a big surprise to many nations, many
peoples. In the future, they will be surprised when they realize their
mistake, that what they have been told is wrong--we are not demons,
servants of the "Devil", a fossil who should disappear, rats or evil.
They will be startled when they find out we are and have indeed been G-d's
servant. When they see the truth, they will indeed be speechless, silent
in the face of what they have believed, what they have done.
| Isaiah 53:1 "Who has believed our report? and to whom
is the arm of the L-RD revealed?" |
The arm of the L-RD is a metaphor used
though out the Tanach to indicate G-d is taking direct action and for
vindication. This same metaphor is used in Deuteronomy 5:15, "And
remember that you were slaves in the land of Egypt, and that the L-RD
your G-d brought you out from there with a mighty hand and with a
stretched out arm;...". They will find the truth even if
spoken by non-Jews hard to believe, hard to accept, but HaShem will
vindicate us, the Jewish people.
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Isaiah 52:2 "For he grew
up before Him as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry
ground; he had no form nor comeliness that we should look at
him, there was no countenance that we should desire him." |
They did not think us pleasing to look
upon, but HaShem will favor us, our suffering will not endure forever.
Indeed, Israel is like a trunk in arid ground, growing with the favor of
HaShem. Isaiah uses the trunk metaphor (see Isaiah 6:12) to refer to the
surviving remnant of Jews that will come out of Babylon purified, free
from the dross of idolaters. Again, no one desired to look at us, seeing
us as less than human, as ugly. Yet, before G-d, we are as a tender
plant coming out of the dry bitter ground of the world. We are a light
in the darkness. Corporate Israel, a singular entity, is the shoot and
no one else. Jesus, for example, was not seen as ugly to look upon and
gathered large crowds.
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Isaiah 53:3 "He is
despised, shunned by men, a man of suffering, familiar with
disease. As one who hid his face from us, he was despised,
we held him of no account." |
According to the NT, Jesus had large
crowds of follower and was not shunned. Israel, on the other hand,
certainly has been shunned. We have been kicked out of many countries,
some more than once. The Romans kicked us out of our own land, renaming
it, trying to make us disappear. Spain, England, Germany, France, Yemen,
Saudi Arabia, etc. have all kicked us out. We have been shunned by men.
We have been despised for many thing we have not done, and just because
we are G-d's servant. The Syrian-Greeks despised us, and tried to
destroy our religion, to make us worship their "gods". We have known
much suffering: the rule of the Syrian-Greeks; the Roman with their
forced labor, crucifixions of hundreds of thousands of Jews, and law
forbidding us to learn or teach Torah; the Crusades; Inquisition;
HaShoah (Holocaust); Dhimi status in Muslim countries; ghettos;
expulsions; pogroms; job restrictions; slavery; etc... The ghettos were
so packed that disease was a problem. In the concentration camps disease
was rampant. Jesus was never shown as diseased. We have been held to be
worthless, of no account by the non-Jewish world, we still are viewed in
this way by many peoples and individuals. They cannot, did not, see our
true face through their hate. This applies so much more to the suffering
on the Jewish people at the hands of intolerant, ignorant, and bigoted
people, than it ever could to Jesus. Again, I remind you that Isaiah is
talking about Israel here when he is talking about My servant.
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Isaiah 53:4 "Yet it was
our sickness that he was bearing, Our suffering that he
endured. We accounted him plagued, smitten and afflicted by
God." |
The sickness was in them, not us. We have
bore the result of their sickness, we have suffered and continue to
suffer because of them. They believed us cursed by G-d, their own books
said so as did their leaders. The took it upon themselves to make sure
that we suffered the curse they thought us to be under. It was they
themselves who made us suffer, through their own free will. Many Jews
continue to suffer at the hands of those who view us as cursed by G-d.
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Isaiah 53:5-6 says "But he
was wounded because of our sins, crushed because of our
iniquities. He bore the chastisement that made us whole, and
by his bruises we were healed. We went astray like sheep,
each going his own way; and the L-RD visited upon him the
guilt of all of us." |
Keep in mind that Israel is still the
servant. Because of the sins of the non-Jews who persecuted us, we were
crushed. We bore the chastisement that made many antisemites feel whole.
The non-Jew did not treat others as they should have, straying from the
Noachide law against murder. It appeared to many who arrayed themselves
against the Jewish people that G-d was punishing the Jews, but it was
really their own guilty actions that caused the suffering of G-d's
servant Israel.
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Isaiah 53:7 "He was
maltreated, yet he was submissive, he did not open his
mouth; like sheep being led to slaughter, like a ewe, dumb
before those who shear her, he did not open his mouth." |
Jesus cried out, he opened his mouth during
his trial. We were maltreated, but following the principle that if we
were submissive it would all blow over and we would survive, the people
would survive, we remained submissive throughout the millennia. In Nazi
controlled Europe, to give a modern example, we again remained
submissive, not knowing that relocation, another exile from another
country like so many others before, was not all Germany had in mind. We
were transported in cattle cars, like sheep to the slaughter. Like ewes
who do not know they are going to be sheared, we did not know the fate
that awaited us in the "relocation trains". We did not open our mouths.
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Isaiah 53:8 "By oppressive
judgment he was taken away, who could describe his abode?
For he was cut off from the land of the living through the
sin of my [i.e. the non Jewish speakers] people, who
deserved punishment." |
They oppressed us, judged us guilty, and
took us away. We, the Jewish people (Israel) were taken away by
oppressive judgment (blood libel trials, pogroms, crusades, inquisition,
anti-Jewish laws, the Shoah). We were murdered, cut off from the land of
the living, because of their sins (ie the sin of murder, etc.) by
non-Jews. It is they who murder who deserved the punishment they gave us
unjustly. It was those who sinned and continue to sin against us, not
us, the servant of G-d, who deserves to be punished.
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Isaiah 53:9 "And his grave
was set among the wicked, and with the rich, in his death --
though he has done no injustice and spoken no falsehood." |
The rich are often portrayed as wicked,
so we are saying the same thing twice for emphasis. Israel (the Jewish
people) have done nothing to merit the ill treatment we have received by
the rest of the world, nonetheless, Jews were still buried in pits and
mass graves. Jews were still given the disrespectful burial of a wicked
man. Our grave stones still removed to pave streets, still desecrated
even here in America. From what I read in the NT, Jesus was given a
decent burial in a nice tomb, not the disrespectful burial of a wicked
person.
| Isaiah 53:10-12 says "But
the L-RD chose to crush him by disease, that, if he made
himself an offering for guilt, he might see offspring and
have long life, and that through him the L-RD's purpose
might prosper. Out of anguish he shall see it; he shall
enjoy it to the full through his devotion. [G-d says:] 'My
righteous servant makes the many righteous, it is their
punishment that he bears; assuredly, I will give him the
many as his portion, he shall receive the multitude as his
spoil. For he exposed himself to death and was numbered
among the sinners, whereas he bore the guilt of many and
made intercession for sinners.'" |
First of all, note that the servant
(Israel) will have offspring and long life. Israel as a group has had
many children and a long life. Jesus had no children and was put to
death by the Romans when he was fairly young. This passage cannot be
referring to Jesus.
They believe that G-d was punishing us,
that the L-RD "chose to crush" us "by disease". But it was their sins
that made us suffer. We are G-d's servants, a light unto the nations,
our role to bring the universal laws, morality to the world. Hitler's
Germany rejected G-d's seven laws for all men, murdering the messenger,
thinking that the message made Germany weak. For their guilt we
suffered. The Jewish people has offered little resistance to the actions
of our persecutors. We have born the brunt of their guilty actions. Yet,
we are still devoted to HaShem and are fulfilling our role to be a light
unto the nations, so that the nations may one day follow the Noachide
laws ordained by G-d. Through our example, we are to make many people
righteous, but we bear the punishment of the guilty in the meantime. We
have been killed by many, dying with the Shema on our lips. We have been
buried in pits as sinners, whereas the killers were the real sinners.
G-d will one day reward us, the nations
will one day recognize our role. The nations have numbered us as sinner
and murdered us because of their misguided beliefs. It is they that were
guilty. We have ever prayed for the world, for the people of the nations
in which we dwelt. In the end, all will stream to Mount Zion to worship,
all will follow the seven laws of Noah, and "... In those days, ten
men from nations of every tongue will take hold--they will take hold of
every Jew by a corner of his cloak and say, 'Let us go with you, for we
have heard that G-d is with you.'" (Zech. 8:23)
Proverb 21:21 "He who strives to do
good and kind deeds attains life, success, and honour."
All quotes from Isaiah 52 and 53 are
taken from: Tanakh, The Holy Scriptures. Philadelphia, Jerusalem:
Jewish Publication Society, 1985.
Other quotes from the Tanakh come from
either Tanakh, The Holy Scriptures. Philadelphia, Jerusalem:
Jewish Publication Society, 1985. or The Davka Tanakh on CD-ROM
This page was made by
Alyza, © copyright 1997-2004
http://geocities.com/alyzab/Jewish/Isaiah53.html
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