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Answer: God deals with Israel in two ways. Singularly,
with every individual and collectively, with the nation
as a whole. Isaiah 53 is an overview of the historical
encounter of collective national Israel with the nations
of the world and God's rewards to the collective remnant
of Israel for its faithfulness to His Torah. A day is
coming when the nations of the world will, by virtue
of the Israelite triumphs, become aware of God's special
relationship to Israel. This will have the effect of
causing, first, shock and disbelief, and then, an acknowledgment
of the special rewards that God will grant Israel, as
is described in the latter part of Isaiah 53.
What the prophet in this chapter describes refers
to Israel as a whole, not every individual Israelite.
Not every Jew will have to undergo every aspect of suffering
to be worthy of eventually partaking in the rewards
God promises. Indeed, not every Israelite has to be
faultless because the suffering servant, Israel, as
a people is innocent. If one is to insist, however,
that Isaiah 53 refers to a specific person, that individual
would personally have to accomplish all that is required
of the suffering servant of the Lord. Failure to do
so is automatic disqualification.
It should be clear to everyone that even if Isaiah
53 referred solely to the Messiah this would still not
infer any support for the claim that it refers to Jesus.
The fundamental theological questions raised by the
missionaries are "Who is the Messiah?" and "If not Jesus,
who then is the Messiah and when will he come?" Jews
are not obligated to identify who the Messiah will be
or give a timetable for his arrival. One can only discuss
the case presented for past claimants to the title.
On this basis, Jews can confidently say that Jesus is
not the Messiah of Israel prophesied in the Hebrew Scriptures.
Jesus could not be the Messiah by virtue of any one
of a number of disqualifications. They range from not
having the biblical genealogical criteria for that office
(one would have to be a biological descendant of David
through the male line of Solomon) to bringing about
the very fundamentals of the messianic age as delineated
in Isaiah, chapter 11. |