Isaiah Introduction/Chapter 1 Introduction: The Hebrew name “Isaiah” means “Jehovah is salvation”, and Isaiah himself lived in Jerusalem with his wife and at least two sons (Isaiah 7:3; 8:3). He spoke during the reigns of four kings of Judah, Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, for a period of some forty to sixty years, in the later half of the 8 th century B.C. (c. 739-683 B.C.). The years surrounding his ministry were years filled with both political and religious upheaval. The Northern kingdom of Israel, which had been going deeper and deeper into idolatry, would fall to the Assyrian Empire in 722 B.C.. Assyria was the pagan nation being used as an instrument of God’s wrath to punish His people for their unfaithfulness (Isaiah 10:5ff; 2 Kings 17). During the reign of Hezekiah (716-687 B.C.), Judah joined a coalition against Assyria led by Tyre and Egypt. As a result in 701 B.C. , Sennacherib invaded Palestine, the account of his campaign against Judah is recorded in 2 Kings 18:3-19:37 and in Isaiah chapters 36-37. During this time 46 Judean cities were sacked and thousands of prisoners were taken, Jerusalem was also threatened, but through the prayers of Hezekiah and Isaiah, the city was saved and the Assyrians were destroyed. There will be four Assyrian invasions into Israel during the lifetime of Isaiah: The Syro-Ephraimite War 734 B.C.: Isaiah 7 (Tiglath-Pilser) Fall of Samaria 722 B.C.: 2 Kings 17 (Shalmaneser) Ashdod Rebellion 711 B.C.: Isaiah 20 (Sargon) Siege of Jerusalem, 701 B.C.: Isaiah 38-39 (Sennacherib) “As Assyria loomed on the eastern horizon, so Egypt was a mighty force to the south. Judah was thus sandwiched between two powerful pagan forces. Languishing in the shadows of these ever-threatening empires, Judah was inclined to form alliances for her protection (Isaiah 30:1ff; 31:1ff; 36:6). The Lord’s people desperately needed to learn, therefore, that ‘Jehovah is salvation’—protection derives from Him, not from military alliances. This point is forcefully stressed in this great book” (Isaiah, Jackson, p. 2). From the very first chapter we will get an ear-full of the corrupt moral conditions during Isaiah’s lifetime. “Corrupt government, land-grabbing, extortion were the 1