home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Online Bible 1995 March
/
ROM-1025.iso
/
olb
/
gill
/
5_000_p.lzh
/
5_001.TXT
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-12-27
|
3KB
|
53 lines
\*Ver. 1. \\INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH\\
\*This book is called, in the New Testament, some-
times %the Book of the Words of the Prophet Esaias%, \\#Lu 3:4\\
sometimes only the %Prophet Esaias%, \\#Acts 8:28,30\\
eS, 30. and sometimes, as here, the %Book of the Prophet
Esaias%, \\#Lu 4:17\\. In the Syriac version the title is,
%the Prophecy of Isaiah the Son of Amos%: and in the
Arabic version, %the Begnning of the Prophecy of Isaiah
the Prophet%. It stands first of all the prophets; though
the order of the prophets, according to the Jews {a}, is,
Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Isaiah, and the twelve. But it is
here placed first, not because Isaiah prophesied before
the other prophets; for Joel, Jonah, Hosea, and Amos,
begun before him, namely, in or before the days ef Je-
roboam the Second; but because of the excellency of
the matter contained in it. Isaiah is called by Ben
Syra {b} the great prophet, and by Eusebius {c} the greatest
of the prophets; and Jerom {d} a says, he should rather be
called an evangelist than a prophet, since he seems
rather to write a history of things past, than to pro-
phesy of things to come; yea, he styles him an apostle,
as well as an evangelist {e}: and certain it is that no one
writes so fully and clearly of the person, offices, grace,
and kingdom of Christ; of his incarnation and birth of
a virgin; of his sufferings and death, and the glory
that should follow, as he does. John, the forerunner
of Christ, began his ministry with a passage out of him
concerning himself, \\#Mt 3:3 Mr 1:3 Lu 3:4 Joh 1:23\\.
Our Lord preached his first sermon at Na-
zareth out of this book, \\#Lu 4:17-21\\ and it was in
this the eunuch was reading when Philip came up to
him, who from the same Scripture preached to him
Christ, \\#Ac 8:28-35\\. And there are more cita-
tions in the New Testament made out of this prophecy
than any other book, excepting the book of Psalms, as
Musculus observes. To which may be added, as an-
other reason, the elegance and sublimity of his style
in which he exceeds the greatest of orators, De-
mosthenes among the Greeks, and Tully among the
Romans; and this is observed both by Jews and Chris-
tians. Abarbinel {f} says, that the purity, and elegance
of his diction is like that of kings and counsellors, who
speak more purely and elegantly than other men:
{a} T. Bab. Bava Bathra, fol. 14.2.
{b} Ecclesiasticus, ch. xlviii. ver. 22.
{c} Demonstrat, Evangel l. 5. c. 4. inscript. p. 225
{d} Adv. Ruffinum, fol. 76. D. tom. 2. ad Paulam &
Eustechium, fol. 2. M. tom. 3.
{e} Prooem. in Es. fol. 2. B. tom. 5.
{f} Comment. in Proph. Poster. fol. 1. 2.