Quote:
Originally Posted by Original Position
Can you summarize his arguments briefly?
1. The passage begins in 52:13 and ends in 53:12. It talks about how this servant will be highly exalted, even more than Abraham, Moses, or the ministering angels.
2. Ancient and modern Jewish interpretations that interpret this passage as being about the Messiah.
3. The reason it can't be referring to Israel as a nation as a whole is because the suffering servant suffers innocently FOR the nations sins. If the nation as a whole were righteous, they would not be humiliated or dying for sins.
5. When Israel suffered, it didn't bring healing to the other nations. God punished the nations that came against Israel. Isaiah 53 says "it pleased the LORD to bruise him." Was God pleased with the holocaust? Certainly not. And no one was healed because of it. God judges the nations that smite Israel. But he heals the people because of the suffering servant.
Hundreds of millions people around the world, both Jew and Gentile, acknowledge they are healed by Messiahs wounds. Healed from a life of degradation, sin, rebellion, atheism, alcoholism, addiction, prostitution, terrorism. They've been made whole by what Messiah did. Jews have received miraculous physical healing because of Messiah's suffering and death. None of this can apply to the nation of Israel or even to a righteous remnant.
Israel is the one being denounced throughout the book of Isaiah; "Woe to the sinful nation a people whose guilt is great, a brood of evildoers, children given to corruption! They have forsaken the Lord; they have spurned the Holy One of Israel and turned their backs on him." Isaiah 1. So they can't be the innocent and blameless servant of Isaiah 53.