Here is a collection of reliable resources to supplement your study of Isaiah 13-14; 24-30; 35. FAIR Resources link to relevant questions which have been answered on the FAIR website. Other Resources link to resources outside of FAIR that are trustworthy and helpful. Under Church Resources you’ll find links to the different Come, Follow Me manuals, as well as other helpful links as applicable. Also on the page are the lesson summary and a guest scholar’s article. This week’s article is by Kerry Muhlestein and is titled Isaiah’s Ability to Speak to Many Time Periods at Once.
“Keys to Understanding Isaiah” by Kerry Muhlestein from the 2022 FAIR Conference
Is the Bible an authentic source of truth?
The Nature of Prophets and Prophecy
Find Answers on FAIRLATTERDAYSAINTS.ORG
The Interpreter Foundation
Come, Follow Me Study and Teaching Helps — Lesson 38: Isaiah 13–14; 24–30; 35, Jonn Claybaugh
Audio Roundtable: Come, Follow Me Old Testament Lesson 38 (Isaiah 13–14; 24–30; 35)
Scripture Roundtable: Old Testament Gospel Doctrine Lesson 37, “Thou Hast Done Wonderful Things”, Administration, September 13, 2014
“The Desert Shall Rejoice, and Blossom as the Rose”, Taylor Halverson, October 29, 2013
Isaiah 2.0 with Joseph M. Spencer, LDS Perspectives, September 5, 2018
Ann Madsen on “Temples in the Margins: The Temple in Isaiah”, Administration, June 4, 2015
Their Imperfect Best: Isaianic Authorship from an LDS Perspective, Daniel T. Ellsworth, September 15, 2017
Book of Mormon Central
Finding Jesus in Isaiah – Isaiah 13–35 | Sep 12–18 | Come Follow Me Insights, Book of Mormon Central
Isaiah’s Fulfilled Prophecy about Babylon’s Destruction in Isaiah 13 (Come, Follow Me: Isaiah 13-35), Book of Mormon Central
Satan in the Book of Isaiah (Come, Follow Me: Isaiah 13-35), Book of Mormon Central
Jesus is the Nail in the Sure Place (Come, Follow Me: Isaiah 13-35), Book of Mormon Central
The Apocalypse of Isaiah (Come, Follow Me: Isaiah 13-35), Book of Mormon Central
Isaiah Teaches Line Upon Line (Come, Follow Me: Isaiah 13-35), Book of Mormon Central
Isaiah Prophecies About Jerusalem (Isaiah 29) | Part 6/7
Applying Isaiah’s Prophecies to Today (Isaiah 30, 35) | Part 7/7
Why Did Nephi Connect Isaiah’s Prophecies with Joseph Who Was Sold into Egypt?, Book of Mormon Central KnoWhy #375, October 24, 2017
BYU Studies
BYU Religious Education Insights into Isaiah: The Day of the Lord Cometh
BYU Religious Education Insights into Isaiah: We Have Waited For Him
BYU Religious Education Insights into Isaiah: Line Upon Line
BYU Religious Education Insights into Isaiah: A Marvelous Work
BYU Religious Education Insights into Isaiah: Go Down Into Egypt
BYU Religious Education Insights into Isaiah: His Sword is Bathed in Heaven
Harmonizing Isaiah: Combing Ancient Scriptures, Donald W. Parry, 2001
Isaiah and the Restoration of Israel, Terry B. Ball, in A Witness for the Restoration: Essays in Honor of Robert J. Matthews, 13–31
Isaiah: Four Latter–day Keys to an Ancient Book, Avraham Gileadi, in Isaiah and the Prophets: Inspired Voices from the Old Testament, 119–38
Other Trusted Sources
Josh Sears on Isaiah’s teachings about relieving oppression (Week of Sept. 12, first to watch)
Shortcast on Isaiah 13-14 (week of Sept. 12, second to watch)
Shortcast on Isaiah 15-17 (Week of Sept. 12, third to watch)
Shortcast on Isaiah 18-20 (Week of Sept. 12, fourth to watch)
Shortcast on Isaiah 21 (and a little of 22) (Week of Sept. 12, fifth to watch)
Destruction of Babylon, lessons from Eliakim and the sure nail (Week of Sept. 12, sixth to watch)
Lamar and Kerry on Isaiah 28-29 (week of Sept. 12, eighth to watch)
A Savior with a Sword (Isaiah 24-27) (Week of Sept 12, seventh to watch)
Follow Him – Hank Smith & John Bytheway: Dr. Kerry Muhlestein “A MARVELLOUS WORK AND A WONDER” PART I, PART II, Youth
Lesson Summary
One of the things the Lord asks prophets to do is to warn about the consequences of sin. In the case of Old Testament prophets, this often meant telling the powerful rulers of mighty kingdoms that they must repent or be destroyed. It was a dangerous task, but Isaiah was fearless, and his warnings to the kingdoms of his day—including Israel, Judah, and surrounding nations—were bold (see Isaiah 13–23).
However, Isaiah also had a message of hope. Even though the prophesied destructions eventually did come upon these kingdoms, Isaiah foresaw a chance for restoration and renewal. The Lord would invite His people to return to Him. He would make “the parched ground … become a pool, and the thirsty land springs of water” (Isaiah 35:7). He would perform “a marvelous work and a wonder” (Isaiah 29:14), restoring to Israel the blessings He had promised them. Neither Isaiah nor anyone else alive at that time lived to see this marvelous work. But we are seeing its ultimate fulfillment today. In fact, we are part of it!
Isaiah’s Ability to Speak to Many Time Periods at Once
By Kerry Muhlestein
More than one time period
I have found that one of the great keys to understanding Isaiah is to see how his writings apply to more than one time period. By that I mean that the same verse or set of verses are intended to be fulfilled in more than one time era. I believe that often Isaiah was inspired to write in a way which allowed his writings to be fulfilled in ways and times even he did not foresee. In my own experience, when I can see the original context and fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecies, I am better able to apply it to myself, and I draw more
power from it.
Being Open to Multiple Applications
In fact, the time that I first felt I was truly understanding, and loving, Isaiah, was when I went through an exercise that
helped me see multiple fulfillments. I used three different translations of Isaiah. I would read a set of verses in one, asking how it would have applied to ancient Israel in Isaiah’s day. I read another, asking how it would apply to modern covenant Israel in our day. Then I read the third looking for how it applied to me as a covenant Israelite individual. It was rare that I did not find meaning for all three scenarios. Further, seeing what happened for the real people in Isaiah’s day opened up a host of understandings of what the same verses meant for me as a real individual in my day. It was a revolutionary experience for me in terms of feeling like the Lord was speaking to me through Isaiah.
This has not ended. Even after years of studying and teaching Isaiah, I find that he speaks to me most powerfully and moves me to
change in my own life when I am thinking of how Isaiah’s words would have applied to his immediate audience, and then I ask myself how they are similar to me. I believe that this can be a meaningful experience for everyone.
Multiple Fulfillments
With that in mind, for this week’s essay I will share some brief excerpts from my book, Learning to Love Isaiah, that discuss the concept of multiple fulfillment prophecies, and also an excerpt from the commentary section that illustrates the concept. The commentary excerpt will only focus on understanding the original context and touches briefly on Messianic fulfillments. I will leave it
to the reader to then ask how it can apply to their own life or to the conditions of our day.
Helpful Tools for Understanding Isaiah
“Another element that makes Isaiah’s prophecies both powerful and difficult is that most of his prophecies are intended to have more
than one fulfillment (as is very briefly discussed in CFM). Isaiah typically wrote his prophecies in just a vague enough way that they would have a fulfillment in his day as well as in other periods of time. As President Dallin H. Oaks said, “The book of Isaiah contains numerous prophecies that seem to have multiple fulfillments. One seems to involve the people of Isaiah’s day or the circumstances of the next generation. Another meaning, often symbolic, seems to refer to events in the meridian of time, when Jerusalem was destroyed, and her people scattered after the crucifixion of the Son of God. Still another meaning or fulfillment of the same prophecy seems to relate to the events attending the Second Coming of the Savior.”[1]
. . .
“Our modern culture particularly struggles with this aspect of Isaiah. We want one symbol to mean one thing, and we want to know the one interpretation or meaning of a prophecy. We struggle with ambiguity, and we tend to dislike holding three or four meanings in our mind and giving credence to all of them. Isaiah is masterful at using a symbol or description that applies to multiple people or situations, yet when he does so, there may be elements that apply more strongly to one fulfillment and others that apply better to another, with none (or only one) of the fulfillments being perfectly suited to Isaiah’s entire description. For Isaiah and his immediate audience, this was not only powerful, but was genius. To us, it is often confusing and undesirable. If we want to better understand Isaiah, we must become increasingly comfortable with ambiguous meanings that do not always have one-to-one correspondences. We must be able to juggle in our minds several fulfillments of a single description.
“I think we do a disservice to ourselves and our faith community when we label a particular fulfillment as the fulfillment. That prevents us from seeing some of the other powerful ways it can and should be applied. I also believe it is not faithful to Isaiah’s genius or intent. If we are going to allow Isaiah to speak with the intent he carefully crafted his writings to convey, then we need to allow for and seek out multiple meanings”(from Learning to Love Isaiah, a Guide and Commentary, by Kerry Muhlestein (American
Fork, UT: Covenant Communications, 2021), 7-8).
Commentary for Isaiah 22:15-22
22:15–19
“In the second part of this chapter, the Lord through Isaiah uses two people to typify the people of Judah. The first, Shebna, is typical of the majority of Judah who have become wicked. Shebna was an important official. He was the treasurer and steward of the king’s house. He seems to have had his heart set on worldly wealth and prestige. Thus, he had built for himself a sumptuous tomb in a prominent place. Like Judah, he desired those things valued by the world. Yet God promised him that having his heart set upon the wrong things made it so that he received neither his desired earthly nor heavenly reward. He would be taken into captivity and die in shame and sorrow there, never being able to take advantage of his lavish tomb. We can see how Shebna stood as a symbol for all of Judah and for many of us in our day.
“It is interesting that the lintel of the tomb of Shebna has been found. Clearly the entrance to an extravagant tomb, it no longer even lies in Jerusalem but is housed in the British Museum where thousands see it every year and are reminded not of Shebna’s prestige and wealth but rather of his fall.
22:20–22
“Shebna is to be replaced by Eliakim, who represents both Christ and those who choose to follow Christ rather than the world. The more we understand Eliakim, the immediate context of this prophecy, the more we will understand what Isaiah is trying to teach us about Christ in this prophecy.
“As part of assuming the office of steward and treasurer, Eliakim will be put in priest-like robes that were apparently part of this
office, signifying his position of governance. Because these robes appear to be similar to those of priests, they would also likely carry temple symbolism. Part of the robe probably included some kind of insignia on the shoulder, perhaps a royal insignia that was representative of Davidic kingship. This must be part of the symbolism Isaiah referred to earlier when he spoke of laying the
government upon the shoulder (of a Judean king and Christ; see Isaiah 9:6). Eliakim is given such power that when he decrees something, no one (except, presumably, the king) can undo it, and if he decrees that something should not happen, none could make it happen.
“All of this is set in language specifically designed to point toward Christ (as CFM invites us to recognize). It is Christ who truly has the powers to seal so that it can’t be broken and to break that which was sealed before. It is Christ who is the ultimate Davidic king and father to all those who will be saved” (from Learning to Love Isaiah, a Guide and Commentary, by Kerry Muhlestein (American Fork, UT: Covenant Communications, 2021), 190-191).
More Come, Follow Me resources here.
[1] Dallin
H. Oaks, “Scripture Reading and Revelation,” Ensign, January 1995.
Kerry received his B.S. from BYU in Psychology with a Hebrew minor. He received an M.A. in Ancient Near Eastern Studies from BYU and his Ph.D. from UCLA in Egyptology, where in his final year he was named the UCLA Affiliates Graduate Student of the Year. His first full time appointment was a joint position in Religion and History at BYU-Hawaii. He is the director of the BYU Egypt Excavation Project. He has been teaching about Isaiah for almost three decades and has been teaching classes specifically on Isaiah for several years, and has written a verse-by-verse commentary on Isaiah. He and his wife, Julianne, are the parents of six children, and together they have lived in Jerusalem while Kerry has taught there on multiple occasions. His 2022 FAIR Conference presentation on “Keys to Understanding Isaiah” can be viewed here.