Isaiah 53 does not say the servant will rise from the dead. If, as we have demonstrated, Isaiah 53 speaks of the servant’s death, then…
Isaiah 53 does not actually say the servant would die. This objection actually contradicts two of the previous objections (specifically, 4.10 and 4.12), both of…
Isaiah 53 cannot refer to Jesus because it says the servant of the Lord was sickly and died of disease. This is the least likely…
Isaiah 53 cannot refer to Jesus because it says no one was interested in the servant of the Lord or attracted to him, yet the…
Several key words in Isaiah 53 speak of a servant in the plural. I’m surprised that you’re still using this objection. It is simply not…
Isaiah 53 contains the words of the repentant kings of the nations rather than the words of the Jewish people. This is not possible. The…
It is not true that the medieval rabbis were the first to apply Isaiah 53 to Israel instead of the Messiah. The Israel interpretation is…
Jehovah’s Witnesses A Counterfeit Kingdom … or Not? (by June Hunt) “They go door to door, proclaiming a curious message of doom, in hope…
The Princetonians and Biblical Authority: An Assessment of the Ernest Sandeen Proposal John D. Woodbridge and Randall H. Balmer For some years now students of…
Biblical Authority in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries: A Question of Transition W. Robert Godfrey Sola Scriptura was one of the ringing cries of the…