Isaiah 40-55 As
Isaiah 40-55 As
1 (I9S7) 3-IS
ISAIAH 40-55 AS
ANTI-BABYLONIAN POLEMIC
EUGENE H. MERRILL
* * *
INTRODUCTION
T riding theme
HOUGHthere can be no doubt that the most important, over-
of Isaiah 40-55 is that of salvation,: a major adjunct
to that theme is the prophet's assault upon the religio-cultural struc-
ture of the Babylonian society from which the Jewish exiles were to
be delivered. It was necessary for them to see both the bankruptcy of
pagan life and institutions-especially as manifest in the gods and
cult-and, by contrast, the incomparability of their God and his
historical and eschatological purposes for them.
Isaiah's unremitting rhetorical attack is called "polemic." Wester-
mann sees polemic as an aggressive element of the prophet's preach-
ing conscripted in service of the message of salvation. 2 It is a shifting
of the contest from the battlefield to the law court for the purpose of
demonstrating forensically that Yahweh is the Lord of history, the
one who is able to link the past with the present and the future.
'This point was made years ago by E. J. Young, The Book of Isaiah, Vol. 3
(NICOT; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1972) 17.
'c. Westermann, Isaiah 40-66, A Commentary (OTL; Philadelphia: Westminster,
1969) 15.
4 GRACE THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
'P. B. Gove, ed., Webster's Third New International Dictionary (Springfield: 1971)
1753. The etymon is Gr. nOACil€Ol, "make war, fight"; cf. W. F. Arndt and F. W.
Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon oJthe New Testament, 2nd ed. (Chicago: University
of Chicago, 1979) 685.
's. N. Kramer, The Sumerians (Chicago: The University of Chicago, 1963) 217-
23; W. G. Lambert, Babylonian Wisdom Literature (Oxford: Clarendon, 1960) 150-51.
5 According to Greek tradition the art of rhetoric was invented by either Tisias or
Corax in Syracuse between 475 and 450 B.C. See George Kennedy, The Art oj Per-
suasion in Greece (Princeton University, 1963) 26.
li For this "structuralist" understanding of the relationship of form to common
lOT. O. Sloan, The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, ed. Philip W. Goetz (Chicago:
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1982) J5. 700.
II Aristotle, "Rhetoric," I, 3 (p. 587).
17 [po 672]).
I7A. Marmorstein, "The Background of the Haggadah," HUCA 6 (1929) 185-204.
ISL. Wallach, "A Palestinian Polemic Against Idolatry," HUCA 19 (1946) 391. For
another study that recognizes both the biblical and classical roots of rabbinic polemic
see H. A. Fischel, "Story and History: Observations on Greco-Roman Rhetoric and
Pharisaism," in ADS Middle West Branch Semi-Centennial Volume, ed. Denis Sinor
(Oriental Series 3; Bloomington: Indiana University. 1969) 59-88.
19It is impossible here to enter into the question of the unity of Isaiah and! or the
predictive character of chaps. 40-55. For the standard arguments pro and con, cf. E. J.
Young, An Introduction to the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. 1958) 215-
25; O. T. Allis, The Unity of Isaiah (Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1950)
39-50.
MERRILL: ISAIAH 40- 55 AS ANTI-BABYLONIAN POLEMIC 7
lOp. A. H. de Boer, Second Isaiah's Message (OTS II; Leiden: Brill, 1956) 100.
"See T. C. Vriezen, An Outline of Old Testament Theology (Oxford: Basil
Blackwell, 1958) 178-79.
28 p . R. Ackroyd, Exile and Restoration: A Study of Hebrew Thought in the Sixth
These appear and reappear over and over, but here we can only
define them and give some examples. 34
Rhetorical Questions
Whybray suggests there are a minimum of 72 examples of rhe-
torical questions in the 333 verses in Isaiah 40-55, 33 of which
employ the personal pronoun ,~.35 And of these Yahweh refers to
himself in 40:26; 41:2, 4; 42:24; 45:21. 36 When followed by a noun and
the relative 'WI\ or in expressions such as "who is God but ... ,"
there is the clear implication of uniqueness.
The most striking example, perhaps, is 45:21:
34 AIl the examples that fcHow are of rhetorical questions with a divine subject or
self-predication. That is, they have the '"I-form~' in common. These are by no means the
only polemical devices the prophet uses (second and third person uses also are employed
effectively), but they are the most direct and perhaps most devastating in their forensic
appeal.
"The rhetorical with '" is frequently used by the worshipers of Yahweh elsewhere
in the OT (Exod 15:11; Deut 3:24; 4;7; Mic 7:18; Psa 35:10; 71:19; 77:14; 89:9; 113:5;
Job 26:22) but in only one other place by Yahweh of himself (Jer 49:19 = 50:44).
M. Smith, JAOS 83 (1963) 419, attributes "Second Isaiah's" use of the interrogative to
Persian influences, especially the Gathas, Yasna 44, where a series of questions is asked
of Ahura Mazda about creation.
"Whybray, Counsel/or, p. 22; cf. Exod 15:1l; Deut 3:24; 4:7, 8; 5:26; I Sam 26:15;
2 Sam 22:32; Jer 49:19; Isa 42:19; Psa 35:10.
37 The translation here and throughout (unless otherwise noted) is that of The
Self-predication
44Por an important study of the "] am" formula, see W. Zimmerli, "lch bin
Jahwe," Gottes Offenbarung(Miinchen: Kaiser, 1963) 11-40.
45Sumerian royal inscriptions, such as votive or dedicatory texts, contained royal
names with many titles and epithets, but the predication took the form of finite
transitive verbs. See W. W. Halla, "The Royal Inscriptions of Ur: A Typology,"
HUCA 33 (1962) 15-22.
46See Eduard Norden, Agnostos Theos: Untersuchungen zur Formengeschichte
religioser Rede (1913; reprint, Stuttgart: Teubner, 1956) 92.
47H. Gressmann, "Die literarische Analyse Deuterojesajas," ZA W 34 (1914) 285-
95. The passages he identified as hymnic self-predication are 41:44ff.; 42:8ff.; 43:11ff.;
44:5ff.; 45:3ff., 18ff.; 46:9ff.; 48: I Iff., 17ff.; 49:26; 50:2; and 51 :5.
"Ibid., 290.
49 Dion, "Le genre litteraire sume-rien," 217.
Introduction la
Assurance of salvation 1ba, 5aa
Nominal substantiation 1M, 5ap
Verbal substantiation 1bpya
Outcome 2-4, 5b-7
"Note, for example, the frequent uses of participiall(1:J outside Isaiah as cited by
Paul Humbert, "Emploi et portee du verbe bara (creer) dans l'Ancien Testament," TZ 3
(1947) 401-22.
16 GRACE THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
I The goddess, the most powerful of all deities that reside in shrines-
2 I am an aristocrat, I am a lady, I am resplendent, I am exalted,
3 My location is lofty, I am feminine, I have dignity,
4 I excel among the goddesses.
5 In heaven my star is great, my name in the underworld,
6 Mention of me is sweet-men discourse on
7 Sound health and the healing touch,
8 My great name is Nintinugga.
"This is the form taken by other Sumerian hymns of this type. See Falkenstein,
SAHG, n. 24 ("A Sulgi Hymn") in which II. 1-19 are the "I am" section, following
which are statements with finite verbs; and so throughout the Sulgi hymns (Castellino,
Two Sulgi Hymns [Be] Studi Semitici 42 [Roma: Universita di Roma, 1972] B, 11 - 12,
82, 119-21; C, 1-6). For the structure of this form, see von Soden, "Hymne," RLA 4
(1972-1975) 539-40.
"w. G. Lambert, "The Gula Hymn of Bullu\sa-rabi," Or 36 (1967) 105- 32.
Lambert suggests a date for its original composition between 1400 and 700 B.C.
(p.109).
18 GRACE THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
CONCLUSION