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Answer: According to the words "He shall see seed, he
shall prolong days," the suffering servant is to be
rewarded for his selflessness in the service of the
Almighty by being blessed with children and prolongation
of life. These two promises must be treated as a unit,
as described in greater detail in Isaiah 65:20- 23.
Each promise complements the other, highlighting the
ancient Hebraic ideal of viewing children and a long
life as the two greatest rewards God gives to man here
on earth. This is further illustrated in Job 5:25-26:
"You shall know also that your seed shall be great,
and your offspring as the grass of the earth. You shall
come to your grave in ripe age, as a shock of corn in
its season." From the manner in which the Hebrew word
zer'a ("seed") is used in the Scriptures, there can
be no doubt that actual physical offspring is meant
here.
Christian commentators have interpreted certain verses
in the Scriptures (Genesis 3:15, 38:8; Isaiah 1:4, 57:4;
Malachi 2:15; Psalms 22:31; Proverbs 11:21) as referring
only symbolically to "bodily seed." But such an interpretation
is unwarranted, since in each of these verses the term
"seed" can be taken in a literal and physical sense.
While the literal understanding of these verses is generally
evident, those from the Book of Isaiah are misunderstood
by some people.
In Isaiah 57, the prophet castigates certain individuals
(not the nation as a whole) for perpetuating the idolatrous
practices of their parents. Isaiah calls them "sons
of the sorceress, the seed of adulterers and the harlot"
(verse 3). He then asks, "Are you not children of transgression,
a seed of falsehood?" (verse 4). These verses are a
scathing denunciation of wicked offspring who uphold
the sinful ways of their parents. They are what the
prophet has earlier termed a "seed of evil-doers" (1:4)
that is, children of parents who do evil deeds. Those
spoken to in Isaiah 57 were conceived in adultery and
harlotry; they are the resultant products of transgression
and falsehood. Literally, they are children born as
a result of parental transgression, a seed born as a
result of parental falsehood.
Christian commentators would like us to believe that
the term "seed" is used metaphorically, meaning, in
Isaiah 53:10, "disciples." Generally, the Hebrew word
bayn ("son") may be employed metaphorically with the
meaning "disciples," but never is the term zer'a ("seed")
used in this sense. For example, "And Abraham said:
'Behold to me You have given no seed (zer'a), and, see
the son (ben) of my house is my heir.' And, behold,
the word of the Lord came to him, saying: 'This man
shall not be your heir, but he that shall come forth
out of your own bowels shall be your heir'" (Genesis
15:3-4). Hence, zer'a must be taken literally, which
rules out the possibility that it refers to Jesus since
he had no children of his own.
The second part of the promise, ". . . he shall prolong
days," also cannot be applied to Jesus, who died at
a young age. To apply these words, as Christian commentators
do, is not only evasive but also meaningless. How can
such a promise have any meaning for Jesus, who is viewed
as being of divine substance and whose existence is
believed by Christianity to be eternal? There would
be no need for God to assure a fellow member of the
Trinity eternal life.
In understanding the meaning of the phrase ". . .
he shall prolong days" it should be understood that
there is a difference in meaning between the concept
of prolonging of days and that of gaining eternal life.
The concept of a prolonged life cannot be treated as
the equivalent of eternal life because in an eternal
context, time of any duration is of no consequence.
Consequently, one cannot speak of an eternal being as
having his days prolonged: "Are Your days as the days
of man, or Your years as a man's days?" (Job 10:5).
God must be referred to as eternal: "The number of his
years is unsearchable" (Job 36:26). He is the first,
He is the last, He cannot be anything else. Prolonging
the days of one who is already supposed to be eternal
would make his life longer than eternity. That is an
obvious impossibility. If the promise of prolonged days
is applied to Jesus, he could not be of divine origin.
Prolonging of life implies earthly mortality, a cut-off
date in the future, while the term eternal life refers
to immortality. Therefore, the phrase "prolonged life"
can only relate to the limited bodily existence in this
world, and not to the endlessness of eternal life. Since
the blessings of seeing children and prolonging life
are only appropriate when applied to a mortal individual
and not to an immortal being, these blessings cannot
be applied to the Jesus of Christian theology. Jesus
died young and childless. If, after his alleged resurrection,
he returned to heaven to become an eternal heavenly
being again, this stage of his existence cannot be appropriately
referred to as prolongation of days.
Once again, we see that Isaiah 53's description of
the suffering servant of the Lord does not find fulfillment
in the New Testament's description of Jesus. |