Isaiah 31:6
Context31:6 You Israelites! Return to the one against whom you have so blatantly rebelled! 1
Isaiah 40:18
Context40:18 To whom can you compare God?
To what image can you liken him?
Isaiah 41:8
Context41:8 “You, my servant Israel,
Jacob whom I have chosen,
offspring of Abraham my friend, 2
Isaiah 43:21
Context43:21 the people whom I formed for myself,
so they might praise me.” 3
Isaiah 49:3
Context49:3 He said to me, “You are my servant,
Israel, through whom I will reveal my splendor.” 4
1 tn Heb “Return to the one [against] whom the sons of Israel made deep rebellion.” The syntax is awkward here. A preposition is omitted by ellipsis after the verb (see GKC 446 §138.f, n. 2), and there is a shift from direct address (note the second plural imperative “return”) to the third person (note “they made deep”). For other examples of abrupt shifts in person in poetic style, see GKC 462 §144.p.
2 tn Or perhaps, “covenantal partner” (see 1 Kgs 5:15 HT [5:1 ET]; 2 Chr 20:7).
3 tn Heb “[so] they might declare my praise.”
4 sn This verse identifies the servant as Israel. This seems to refer to the exiled nation (cf. 41:8-9; 44:1-2, 21; 45:4; 48:20), but in vv. 5-6 this servant says he has been commissioned to reconcile Israel to God, so he must be distinct from the exiled nation. This servant is an ideal “Israel” who, like Moses of old, mediates a covenant for the nation (see v. 8), leads them out of bondage (v. 9a), and carries out God’s original plan for Israel by positively impacting the pagan nations (see v. 6b). By living according to God’s law, Israel was to be a model of God’s standards of justice to the surrounding nations (Deut 4:6-8). The sinful nation failed, but the servant, the ideal “Israel,” will succeed by establishing justice throughout the earth.