Saturday, July 1, 2023

Bruce K. Waltke on Isaiah 45:7

  

Isaiah 45:7. In one text alone we are told that God created darkness: “The One forming light and creating darkness, causing well-being and creating calamity” (Isa. 45:7). How can we harmonize this statement with the analysis that God did not create the darkness found in Genesis 1:2? I would like to make two suggestions here. He may well have had this act of the first day in view. In this sense one can say that God formed the light and even created the darkness. But I do not think this is Isaiah’s thought. We should rather realize that this pronouncement is made as part of the conclusion to the famous Cyrus oracle, Isaiah 44:24-45:4. This oracle falls into two distinct parts. In 44:24-28, He calls Cyrus and His shepherd to release His people out of the restraint of the Babylonian captivity; and in 45:1-4, He calls Cyrus as His Messiah to smash Israel’s oppressors. On the one hand, then, Yahweh’s servant brings peace for God’s people; on the other hand, Cyrus brings destruction on Israel’s enemies. Cyrus is both the author of peace and calamity, or to use metaphorical terms, he is both the author of light and darkness. But the one who called Cyrus to his twofold task is none other than Yahweh, the author of truth.

 

We conclude, therefore, that this passage does not bear on the discussion. (Bruce K. Waltke, Creation and Chaos: An Exegetical and Theological Study of Biblical Cosmogony [Portland, Oreg.: Western Conservative Baptist Seminary, 1974], 71)

 

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