Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Notes on the Use of Isaiah 6 in John 12 in "John Among the New Testament Writers" (2024)

  

Yet while it is likely that John reads Isais’s theophany in Isaiah 6 as a Christophany, it is not necessarily the case that John wholly replaces Isaiah’s vision of God with a vision of Jesus. Instead, the very ambiguity of John’s language suggests that it can be read in reference to both Jesus and God: the title “Lord” (κυριος) often applies to both God and Jesus, and the pronoun “his” (αυτου) could technically apply to both God and Jesus as well (i.e., the narrator does not specifically say that it is “Jesus’s Glory” but only “his Glory”). John’s statement that Isaiah “saw his Glory,” therefore, could be read in relation to Jesus and God simultaneously. (Brittany E. Wilson, “Seeing Jesus, Seeing God: Theophany and Divine Visibility in the Gospel of John,” in John Among the New Testament Writers: Early High Christology, ed. Christopher M. Blumhofer, Diane G. Chen, and Joel B. Green [Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2024], 61)

 

 

The LXX exchanges the MT’s “robe for Glory” for πληρης ο οικος της δοξης αυτου while the targums exchange it for Shekinah. John’s ταυτα επιενΗσαιας οτι ειδεν την δοξαν αυτου, και ελαλησεν περι αυτου can be read in one of several ways: (1) John interpreted Isaiah’s temple vision of God’s Glory (Isa 6) as a revelation of the Glory of the pre-incarnate, preexistent Jesus, and then spoke about him, Jesus, in his prophecy (Isa 49, 52, 60); (2) John interpreted Isaiah’s temple vision of God’s Glory (Isa 6) as a throne vision, in which Isaiah peered into the heavens to see the pre-incarnate, preexistent Jesus as a human shaped figure of Glory (like that of Dan 7 or 1 En. 69 and akin to the extended throne vision of Ascension of Isaiah) and, then, spoke about him (Isa 49, 52, 60); (3) John interpreted Isaiah as having looked into the future to see the Glory of the incarnated Jesus as realized in his earthly signs that culminated in Jesus’s death (i.e., as recounted in John’s Gospel) and spoke about it (Isa 49, 52, 60); or (4 John interpreted Isaiah has having (fore) seen the Glory of Jesus (Isa 49, 52, 60) and spoke about him (Isa 49, 52, 60). The last option is to be preferred. Rather than making Isaiah say he saw something he did not (Isa 6 says the prophet saw Yahweh’s Glory, not Jesus’s), or transforming the setting of the experience from the temple to the heavens, or having Isaiah prophesy about the specifics of the life of Jesus, option (4) depends only on John interpreting Isaiah’s servant as Jesus. The connection between suffering/death and Glory is already present in Isaiah. (Carey C. Newman “The Glory of John,” in John Among the New Testament Writers: Early High Christology, ed. Christopher M. Blumhofer, Diane G. Chen, and Joel B. Green [Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2024], 258 n. 46)

 

 

 

 

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