HomeWHOWho Is The King Of Babylon In Isaiah 14

Who Is The King Of Babylon In Isaiah 14

Table of Contents

SUMMARY

The king of Babylon, like all oppressors, will finally be brought down by a just God. Their arrogance will be their downfall.

ANALYSIS

This text makes clear the sense of the oracles against the nations in chapters 13-23. The point is not hostility to the outsider, but rather God’s unwavering opposition to tyranny and injustice. The nations are not rejected because they are foreign, but only when they oppress others and claim to act with the power of God (14:13-14). Indeed, Isaiah’s broader message is clear: God desires the salvationSalvation can mean saved from something (deliverance) or for something (redemption). Paul preached that salvation comes through the death of Christ on the cross which redeemed sinners from death and for a grace-filled life. More of all nations, not just of Israel (45:22; 56:6-7).

The text is a taunt song, filled with the kind of mockery and derision one might hear from children celebrating that a playground bully has finally found his or her comeuppance. Babylon saw itself as master of all it surveyed, which was largely true from a human perspective. But Babylon used its power tyrannically, so all rejoice when God assures them of its eventual downfall.

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In another of Isaiah’s oracles that include the impact of God’s actions on the entire creationCreation, in biblical terms, is the universe as we know or perceive it. Genesis says that in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. In the book of Revelation (which speaks of end times) the author declares that God created all things and… More, the hearer overhears the rejoicing of the cypresses and the cedars of Lebanon over Babylon’s collapse (v. 8). Lebanon was renowned in the ancient Near East for the glory of its cedars, which were exploited rapaciously by rulers for their arrogant building projects, especially Babylon (here) and Assyria (2 Kings 19:23). But Israel was not immune; Solomon, too, used the cedars for the building of the templeThe Jerusalem temple, unlike the tabernacle, was a permanent structure, although (like the tabernacle) it was a place of worship and religious activity. On one occasion Jesus felt such activity was unacceptable and, as reported in all four Gospels, drove from the temple those engaged… More of Jerusalem (1 Kings 5:6). This text might be an implied rebuke of Solomon’s grandeur as well, the cost of which contributed to the breakup of the monarchy (2 Kings 12:1-19).

The passage uses a well-known Canaanite myth when it describes the king as the “Day Star, son of Dawn”-a would-be god who falls from heaven. This mythic connection remains as the Latin version of the passage renders “Day Star” as “Lucifer,” thus making a connection with the image of Satan falling from heaven described by Jesus (Luke 10:18).

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