gop_jeff said:
I never take the discussion of facts as an attack. Now if you called me an idiotic fanatical moron, I would take offense!

(not that you have - just an example)
This is the kind of discussion, conversation or debate that I prefer without calling each other names or invectives.
There are a couple of problems with this interpretation.
First, if Isaiah 53 refers to Israel and not to Jesus Christ, how can the claim be made in v. 9 that his judgment/oppression was injust: "He had done no violence, nor was there any deceit in his mouth." From Judges through Chronicles, there are abundant examples of the sin of Israel. God would be justified in punishing Israel for their sins; yet Isaiah 53 describes an innocent servant being punished, "poured out as a guilt offering."
Second, the servant dies. Israel has not - and the Bible is pretty clear that God is not going to let Israel die out.
Good points.
Isaiah 53:9
And they made his grave with the wicked, and with the rich his tomb; although he had done no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth.'
You say that there were abundant examples of the sins of Israel from Judges to Chronicles. Read your Isaiah 53:9 again. Do you think that 'done no violence' or 'no deceit in his mouth' is the equivalent as SINS?
Remember that Isaiah 53:9 was talking about a prophecy in future times. Just as Jesus time on earth was for a specific time frame and events.
One example of a future prophecy definition of this verse: During the years of the holocaust, the Nazis made G-d's first-born son Israel a grave with the wicked (ashes with the EVIL Nazis) and with the rich (gas chambers and smoke stacks said by the Nazis as their entrance to paradise or with the newly
rich NAZIS who stole all the gold from their teeth and possessions) His son's tomb. The Jews had done no violence or lied to the Nazis that could be used as an excuse to murder all the men, women and children of Israel (that son of G-d, his first-born).
Then with Jesus and violence during his lifetime. How could Isaiah 53:9 refer to a non-violent Jesus who displayed violence?
Matthew 21:12
12 And Jesus went into the temple of God, and 'cast out all them' that sold and bought in the temple, and 'overthrew the tables' of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves
Matthew 8:32
32 And he said unto them, Go. And when they were come out, they went into the herd of swine: and, 'behold, the whole herd of swine ran violently down a steep place into the sea, and perished in the waters.'
What exactly does the fact that G-d had made a covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob have to do with a future event in time in which half of His children were destroyed in Isaiah 59:3 and G-d's original covenant promise that He would never allow all of His (first-born) son to be destroyed?
Remember that the Prophets were speaking of what they were shown to them by G-d and they described future events in time frames.
So we both can read the Prophets and find things that SEEM to be those referred too.
Angels in the Bible usually appeared to people, prophets, etc. God is always described as being in some kind of light, especially in Ezekiel and Isaiah. Even in the Gospels, angels appear to Mary and Elizabeth; angels also appear to Peter and Paul in the book of Acts, and they are always recognizable as such. A voice from heaven would have been recognized by the contemporary readers of the Gospels as God's voice, just as today, using a phrase like "Paris denied any wrongdoing" is understood to be the French government.
You again are correct. No one can see G-d for He has no form, shape, substance or anything that man can visualize. But we are not talking about seeing G-d except in bright lights, burning bushes or clouds refrencing what G-d Himself is quoted as saying. We are not talking abut RECOGNIZING or INTERPRETING a voice as G-d's voice, instead we are referencing a clear quote
(G-d said). For your Paris - French Government example to be valid, the NT Gospel would have had to say, "G-d's voice from the clouds said this my only son.... or G-d said I am bringing my only son back to me in the sky (ascending). But again, there were many people who witnessed Christ's ascension who thought the voice from the sky were angels only.
That's fine. If nothing else, then you will understand the reasons I believe the things I do, and I will understand the reason you believe what you do.
Mutual understanding of each other's points of view goes without saying....