The chapter unfolds in three movements: God makes himself reachable and recounts persistent defiance with announced repayment; he explains preserving a people for inheritance while ending the path of those who refuse; it concludes with a renewed-world.
The chapter unfolds in three movements: God makes himself reachable and recounts persistent defiance with announced repayment; he explains preserving a people for inheritance while ending the path of those who refuse; it concludes with a renewed-world.
Context Snapshot
Date
Prophetic ministry in Judah, c. 740-700 BC
Genre
Prophetic vision and oracles
Setting
Judah/Jerusalem
Audience
Judah and Jerusalem
World Stage
c. 740-700 BC
Neo-Assyrian Empire
Assyrian kings including Tiglath-pileser III and Sennacherib 8th-7th century BC
Isaiah ministers in Judah as Assyria dominates the region and Jerusalem faces political fear. The book sets judgment, holiness, messianic hope, and future restoration against the pressure of empire and failed trust.