I think the original poster was hoping that someone would explain this chapter from an Islamic perspective.
Is the following consistent with how this chapter is viewed in Islam?
http://www.mosqueonline.com/saviour/jesus/trinity/is-isaiah-53.htm
:wa:
so God is a debt collector who's collecting the debt of sin from us by killing his son right?
I think it is possible to give an interpretation of Isaiah 53 without having to attack every Christian concept, after all, they are not all a part of the chapter in question. So, if we can stay focused on that chapter.
rabimansur said:The Jewish commentators have argued that this chapter is a prophecy of the nation of Israel, their suffering, scattering etc.
How does Islam view this chapter?.
Thomas Paine -Examination Of The Prophecies said:Isaiah, or at least the writer of the book that bears his name, employs the whole of this chapter, Iiii., in lamenting the sufferings of some deceased persons, of whom he speaks very pathetically. It is a monody on the death of a friend; but he mentions not the name of the person, nor gives any circumstance of him by which he can be personally known; and it is this silence, which is evidence of nothing, that Matthew has laid hold of, to put the name of Christ to it; as if the chiefs of the Jews, whose sorrows were then great, and the times they lived in big with danger, were never thinking about their own affairs, nor the fate of their own friends, but were continually running a Wild-Goose chase into futurity.
To make a monody into a prophecy is an absurdity. The characters and circumstances of men, even in the different ages of the world, are so much alike, that what is said of one may with propriety be said of many; but this fitness does not make the passage into a prophecy; and none but an impostor, or a bigot, would call it so.
Isaiah, in deploring the hard fate and loss of his friend, mentions nothing of him but what the human lot of man is subject to. All the cases he states of him, his persecutions, his imprisonment, his patience in suffering, and his perseverance in principle, are all within the line of nature; they belong exclusively to none, and may with justness be said of many. But if Jesus Christ was the person the church represents him to be, that which would exclusively apply to him must be something that could not apply to any other person; something beyond the line of nature, something beyond the lot of mortal man; and there are no such expressions in this chapter, nor any other chapter in the Old Testament.
It is no exclusive description to say of a person, as is said of the person Isaiah is lamenting in this chapter, He was oppressed and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth; he is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before his shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth. This may be said of thousands of persons, who have suffered oppressions and unjust death with patience, silence, and perfect resignation.
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That's generally good advice with regard to most commentaries, there is good and bad alike to be found in most all of them (though some are so bad as to offer no help at all). Certainly Thomas Paine's commentaries on the Colonial scene were very helpful with regard to the American Revolution, but his writings with regard to Isaiah 53 seem to miss completely that it is a part of a large section of the book of Isaiah. His treatment of it in isolation from that larger context makes it very unhelpful in nature.My advice to Muslims ,just don't follow blindly any Jewish commentary, their commentaries are helpful but not all the way ...
Regards
his writings with regard to Isaiah 53 seem to miss completely that it is a part of a large section of the book of Isaiah. His treatment of it in isolation from that larger context makes it very unhelpful in nature.
If you mean his treatment with isaiah 53 was out of context,then I think you should read again my quotation....
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